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Florida 



Friday 

D0omber 1, 1978 




SertiBg TiUnliiMeg for 66 yean 



Ray's kin linked |catch-22 of 
to King murder? 



Inaugural at FSU 



Gtn. -elect 

invited all 

1 .illahasser Jan. 



Boh (>raham ycslrrda\ 
i>l FU>rtda to come tv» 
2 for inaugiiratKHi 
V c T) m«tnics concluding with the imiugurml 
f .i!' !«• be ht id ai ^ p.m. in TulK Gvm. 

Am«»njj ihv inaugural events uil! he an 
6:30 a.m. pra\cr service at FAMl' a 
parade, and a street dance aad picnic on 
Adams Street between Tennessee sad 
the govemur's hotm kvm 4'M to t p.m. 



by daniel f. gilmora 



WASHINGTON - The House Assassi- 
nations Committee yesterday told a brother 
of James Earl Ray it had incriminating 
information linking him to an alleged family 
conspiracy to finance the stalking and 
killing of Martin Luther King Jr. 

Jerry Ray, brother of James who pleaded 
guilty to shooting King, denied any 
knowledge of a $27,000 bank robbery the 
committee suspects might have financed 
the assassination. 

He also denied a third brother. John* took 
part. 

Committee staff counsel Mark Speiser 
said panel investigators have leceived 
"information of an incriminatory nature" 
that Jerry Ray particqiated in the July 13, 
1%7 robbery of an Alton. III. bank, 
presnmably topiovide funds for James Earl 
Ray to pursue and kill King sad flee to 
Canada and Enmfe. 

Jerry Ray tried in vain to invoke the 
Fifth Ajnendmeat, desfMte a grant of 
immunity from prc»secution, and ^is 
attonieys sttem p ted msoccessfafly to iave 



staatial evidence*' by oomniltee oooasei 
strldLen from the record. 



The committee has been trying to 
establish whether James Earl Ray was 
assisted by his brothers in a family 
conspiracy to kill King and collect a $50,000 
bounty allegedly offered by St. Louis 
businessperson. 

John Ray, arrested Monday in St. Louis 
on burglary and assault charges, is 
scheduled to appear before the panel today. 

Jerry Ray's counsel Florynce Kennedy, a 
black lawyer, repeatedly protested that 
neither local nor federal authorities were 
able to establish responsibility for the A|t( n 
bank robbery. 

Ray told the cominittee he is now working 
for J.B. Stoner. the Atlanta white 
supremicist who » chairman of the National 
States Rights party. He said no one else will 
hire him in view on constant **FB1 
harassment.** 

Asked about statements he allegedly 
made to writer Arthur George McMillan 
concerning James Earl Ray*s escape fiom 
the Missouri State Penitentiary on April 23, 
I%7, Jerry Ray said he could not 
**remember all this stuff." 

The committee heard extensive testimony 
Wednesday about an alleged SSO.00O 
reward ol^red by two decease)] St Louis 
men for King's death. 



Graham willing to lobby 
for ERA in special session 




by dennis mulquaan 



Bob Graham 

. . .offers to iobby for ERA 



The on-again, off-again fate of the Equal 

Rights Amendment took an upward turn 
yesierdav. as Gov. -elect Bob Graham 
acknowledged he might lobby for the 

measure and leading Senate proponent Jack 
Gi)rdi>n contended the ERA has a chance of 
making ii \o (he Senate floor in next week's 
special scssi*)n. 

The special session was called Tuesday 
bv Gov. Rcubin Askew in order to 
re-establish the Green Swamp and the 
Florida Keys as areas of critical concern to 
the state. A recent Supreme Court decision 
overturned a Florida law protecting these 
areas. 

Graham, speaking at a morning news 
conference, said he would be willing to 
lobbv for the ERA "if I uerc asked to by the 
governor or other responsible people." 

There is a "slight sense of urgency" to 
pass the ERA before the 1979 session of the 

mm to GRAHAM, pagm 3 



fighting back: 
Do women 
who resist 
attack with 
martial arts 

face threat of 
worse harm? 



Last in a series, 
by helen felsing 

HamfeMMi staff writ*r 

Cateh.22. 

If a woman knows how to fight, she will 
defend herself against a rai^st; but if the 
rapist knows she knows, he will kill her. 

At least, that's a fear that haunts 
potential victims and frustrates rape 
preventuHi educators. How do you 
mobilize women in self-defense, without 
inciting rapists to nK>re violent attacks? 

"I keep thinking about a scene in the 
film we show," reflects FSU safety officer 
Jim Sewell. who directs the campus- 
based rape prevention program. 

"These rapists are sitting in a semi- 
circle. The interviewer asks, *What about 
self-defense?' 

"One guy answers right away: *It*ll get 
you killed. The woman I was with fought 
back. She's dead.*" 

Deputy sheriff Jim Murdaugh. a crime 
prevention specialist for Leon County, 
has similar worries. 

"You may remember the story about 
the woman in Los Angeles who was a 
third degree black belt and was attacked. 
She proceeded to resist. 

**The man proceeded to kill her. He 
had no weapon." 

Leslee Williams, a petite, firm-spoken 
Tallahassee woman who as a fourth Dan 
Yoshukai black belt is one of the highest- 
ranked female karate practitioners in the 
United States, partially agrees with the 
point made bv Murdaugh and Sewell. 

"Sometimes." she explains, "a 
uoman who knows very little about self- 
defense might be better off than someone 
very skilled in a martial art. 

"The people who know me. if they 
chose to attack me. v^ouldn't bother to try 
and contain me They'd just kill me. 

"And I ihmk m that story in Los 



Angeles the attacker was the woman's 

boyfriend. He knew very w^ she was an 

accomplished martial artist. So once he'd 

attacked her. he had to kiB her.** 

Boastfniness. over-confidence, or a 

reliance on physical defense in fieo-of 

preventive measuies. counsels Williams. 

can invite attack rather than repel it. 

m m m 

But fiw most women, say self-defense 
instructors, the problem's just the 
opposite: confidence is exactly what 
women lack when it comes to physical 
encounters. 

"When I was on foot patrols." recalls 
former police officer Alice Me A dam. now 
a crisis counselor, "if I approached a man 
on the street from behmd. he would turn 
around and face me. 

•*A woman would hunch her shoulders 
and keep walking. Not one woman ever 
turned around and Ux^ktcl at me." 

Williams, in the mixed karate class she 
teaches through the Center for 
Participant fiducation. sees the same 
phenomenon. '*Most wt^men don't 
readily relate to punches and kicks. Manv 
have never thought about what it would 
be like to really injure someone." 

"But when a woman becomes involved 
in a martial art. she begins to see what 
her body can really do. 

"A woman who is an athlete, any kind 
of athlete, grows aware of her strength 
and agility. She knows she is powerful " 

A karate class or other martial arts 
class, says Williams, teaches the student 
to use that strength in actual physical 
confrontatiofi. 

"There's great value in the repeti- 
tiveness of the traming. Over and over 
again the woman is moved to an 



turn to MARTIAL ARTS, 



2 / Friday, December 1, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



i 



■ i 

0 



Bundy asks high court for another judge; 
Rudd to rule today on trial delay motion 



toy dmni vogt 

MSiStMit IMWS 9t i Hr 

Theodore Bundy yesterday asked 
the Florida Supreme Court both to 
postpone his murder trial and to 
remove Circuit Court Judge John 
Rudd from presiding over it. 

In a separate request Rudd will hear 
at 9:30 this morning a motion filed in 
circuit court by Bundy for a delay of 
his trial — set to begin Monday — 
until sometime after Christmas. 

Bundy is charged with two counts of 
first degree murder and related 
charges in the deaths of two FSU 
sorority sisters and the savage 
beatings of three other women Jan. 15 
Supreme Court Qerk Sid White said 
Bundy*s petition may not he 
considered until Monday but added 
the court in the past has been able to 
consider emergency petitions the day 
i^er they were filed, implying that a 
ruling could be made by the court 
before Bundy* s trial begins. 
*The first thing the supreme court 




Ted 
Bundy 

photo by robert o'lary 

will do is issue a . rule and get a 
response (to Bundy*s petition) in 
writing from Judge Rudd/* said Chkf 
Deputy Clerk Bemice Smilgin« adding 
such a rule would automatically stop 
the trial. 

'^*Then the court will consider the 
petition itself and the response*' and 
give a decision, she added. 

Rudd granted Biindy a two-month 



delay on Oct. 4. but since then has 
dismissed several motions filed by 
Bundy. including one asking Rudd to 

disqualify himself as trial judge and 
another asking Rudd to allow Atlanta 

lawyer Millard Farmer to represent 
Bundy. 

Bundy has claimed Rudd talked 
with investigators and prosecutors 
without notifying the defense, and 
backs up his allegations with sworn 
statements from the public defenders 
office. 

In his petition to the supreme court 
for a w^t of prohibition, Bundy said 
Rudd can no longer be impartial and 
thus cannot give him a fak trial. 

* Petitioner (Bundy) is facing a trial 
which could result in a death sentence. 
If that sentence is imposed by the 
respondent (Rudd), would the public 
at large have confidence in that 
sentence being the result of impartial 
justice? When there is a doubt the 
judge should step aside,*' Bundy said 
in the petition. 



* 



* "CHRISTMAS JAM " * 

Rl. t SAT. Nigkt 

(Dm. I<t t, M) 

5 HOT BANDS: 

i THE TALLAHASSEE 

* BAND 
CROSSCUT SAW 

SPICE 
HUTCH & HOSS 

& 

A Special Guest from Jou 

BYOB - 13.00 Admission 



lliilionul Guard AiMMir lail 

(CipHoi Ckde East) 

'^SowliieiM Fnedl Mimic PradHClm^ 




Come see the 
1 pec^ileM* 





BIG BOY 

Frisch's on the Campus: 

1 775 West Tennessee Street 



WHAT MAKES THE DISCO BEAT? 






SUNDAY AT STEREO SALES 
625 West Tennessee Street Store from 
12-5 p.m. the TAPCO representative will 
demonstrate the tools of professional 

musicians! 




Come see the heartbeat of disco! Ssi it 
demonstrated by professional diteo 
dancer James Gunn and partner at 2 p.m. 
Sunday. 




f€0 



Don't Miss this Exciting 




2625 S. Monroe 
877-1728 ; 

10- 7;M-F 

11- 5 Sat. 



his W. Tennessee 
224-2635 

10- 7 M-F 

11- 5 Sat. 

12- 5 Sun. 



1H85 N. Bi 
386-4081 
11 -8 M-F 

11- 5 Sat.. 

12- 5 Sun. 





BEAUTIFUL SURPRISES 

HAPPEN 

AT 




HAIR CUTTING 'The Wa\f You Want It' 

337 Dewey St. - 222-0889 
Behind the Tennessee St. Subway 





Graham 



Floridi legiiifttiife, Graham said, because 

lawsuit challenging the 
conititotioaality of a Congressional 
citeatkMi of tke fatlfication deadline. 

The origina] ratification deadline of 
Maich 1979waseitendc J n June 30. 1982. 

by Congress. So far. 35 states have passed 
ERA, but 38 are needed for the 
ontrover^U amendment banning sez 
itscrimiaation to become law. 

The *79 session does not start until April, 
ind thus if the ratification deadline is ruled 
unconstitutional, the ERA would be killed 
tor good. 

Sen. Jack Gordon. D-Miami Beach, who 
spearheaded the drive for ERA passage in 
the Florida Senate, estimated the cards are 
now stacked at an even 20-for, 20-againsi. 

The last go-around in 1976, the measure 
was narrowly rejected by a 21-19 margin. It 
barely squeaked through the House, 61-58. 

Gordon told The Flambeau he thinks the 
one or two votes necessary for the 
amendment's passage can be garnered 
before the special session gets underway 
next Wednesday. 

**rve talked to a few people (today)," he 

said. 

However, leading ERA opponent Sen. 
Dempsey Barron said he doesn't think the 
measure warrants a place on the special 
session agenda because it wouldn't make it 
to the floor. Even if Askew put the ERA on 
the agenda, it would still have to make it 
through the Rules Committee before it 
could reach the Senate floor for a vote. 

Barron, D-Panama City, is chairperson 
of the Rules Committee. 

Askew has previously stated that he 
would schedule the amendment only if the 
necessary votes for its passage are 
guaranteed. 

The Senate itself could get the provision 
on the agenda, but only by t two-thirds 
vote, which seems impossible. 
Barron said if Askew, Graham and 



nmmA flambeau IFMm O^cmHtm 1 f 978 / 3 



Sen. Jack Gordon 

says ERA has a chance 
Gordon launch a campaign to get tlw ERA 
through the Senate, he would 
lobbying wholeheartedly against it, 

**If someone starts to put pressure on 
somebody, I would feel compelled to do the 
same thing/' the former Senate pccsideot 
said. "You tell Sea. Gordon not to mess 
with ERA." 

Crucial senators who might go either 
way are Guy Spicola. D-Tampa; Pat Neal, 
D Bradenton; and Vernon Holloway, 

D-Miami. 

Neal said he will vote "no," despite a 
previous **yes" vote while in the House. 
Holloway previously voted against the 
measure, but said he might change his 
mind if he can be convinced that his 
constituents want it passed. 

Speaking on other subjects at his aews 
conference, Graham said he: 

•Thinks Alfredo Duran has done a good 
job as head of the State Democratic Party, 
and has no plans to replace him. 

•Urges the Public Service Nominating 
Commission to step up its preparation of a 
list of candidates from which he wtti setect 
three. 

•Opposes changing the date of the 
September primary to May. 

•Favors limiting total campaign 
spending as well as setting a cap oa the 
amount of money a candidate can 
contribute to his own campaign. 




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NORTHWOOD AAAU 



4 / Friday, December 1, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Florida 




No more parking on IM fields 

Hazardous 

Picture this. The Lambda Chis line up against Pi Kappa 
Alpha for the fraternity championships in intramural flag 
football. The ball is hiked and a Lambda Chi receiver 
makes a diving catch on what almost was an errant pass. 
As the receiver hits the M turf head first, the jagged 
remains of a broken beer bottle, half-hidden in the grass, 
rip a six-inch gash in the right side of his face. 

Weeks in the hospital and extensive operations by 
skilled plastic surgeons are required to repair the 
student's face. No amount oi corrective surgery will ever 
hide the garish scar he will bear the rest of his life. 

He seeks out a shrewd lawyer and sues Florida State 
University for $500,000 in damages, charging gross and 
wiUful negligence on the part of school officials as 
responsible for the mishap. 

Sound far-fetched? Not at all. After every home football 
game in Campbell Stadium, the intramural fields located 
across Pensacola Street from the stadium are in shambles. 

''Broken glass and other debris imbedded in the playing 
surface and the" ruts caused by the cars continually 
stopping and starting on the moist ground has to be our 
main concern," says Paul Dirks, director of intramurals at 
FSU. "The possibility of a knee or ankle injury or of 
someone getting cut by glass has to be one of our greatest 
fears. After our first home game and the Florida game the 
damage was so extensive that the fields could have been 
classified as hazardous." 

Hundreds of cars allowed to park on the IM fields and 
the dozens of rowdy tailgate parties held there pose a very 
definite threat to the safety of intramural participants. 

The problem is not new. For years some administrators 
have been pushing for a ban on parking on the IM fields. 
They are countered every time by the economic argum^ts 
of the FSU Boosters who claim that a lack of available 
parking space could hurt season ticket sales. 

While parking admittedly would be a problem for FSU's 
home football games were it banned from the IM fields, 
the dangers posed to the hundreds of students who 
regularly participate in IM activity on the fields we think 
outweighs the inconvenience to football fans twenty-fold. 

According to Dirks, former FSU President Stanley 
Marshall said 1974 would be the last year for parking on 
the IM fields. That was, of course, four years ago and 
parking is still going strong. 

football is over for 1978. It's time parking on the IM 
fields is over for good. 



Florida Flambeau Foundation Inc. business and advertising office 206 N. 
Woodward Avenue, phone 644-4075; Newsroom 204 N. Woodward Avenue, 
phone 644-5505; Production/Mediatype lab 314 University Union, phone 
644-5744; Classified ad office 306 University Union, phone 644-5785. Mailing 
address, P.O. Box U-7Q01, Ronda State Unjversity, Tallahassee, Florida. 

Steve Watkins Editor 

BetfaRudowske NewsEditor 

SidD^rBedaigfield Sports Editor 

Damii Vogt — Assistant News Ekiitor 

KenLewandoski Arts / Futures Editor 

Richard Johnson General Manager 

Midia^ White Advertising Manager 

BobShearer PtodHetioii Manager 

Jane Duncan . — Mediatype Manager 

Laiffie Jones Business Manager 

DawnStephoifield Office Coordinator 

Gail Abers, Gregg Anderson, Fred Beu, Nancy Boughamer, Steven Cannon, 
Mary Lynn Ooniille. Marie Dowling, Lisa Frimet, Barbara Hayes. Laurie Jones. 
JoMiyn iflwvther. Davis WNiimin. 




Science of, for, by the people 



Letters 




Editor: 

Mr. E.V. Pons writes to assure 
us that "nuclear energy. . .is the 
intelligent choice," citing Wash- 
1400. the "Rasniusen Report" as 
good reading for those of us 
uneasy about safety. 

Thanks. . .but no, thanks! 
Pons, while liberally sprinkling 
his letter with literature citations, 
seems to have missed the 
"Reactor Safety Study Review," 
recently published by the Nuclear 
Regulatory Comniission (NRC). 
The only praise that the review 
has for Wash- 1400 is that its 
methodology has much potential 
for the study of large, complex 
systems. The review then 
proceeds at length to demonstrate 
that Wash- 1400. through shoddy 
use of statistical methods, obfu- 
scation in derivations of formulae, 
and outright manufacture of 
certain error estimates, im- 
peaches itself. In addition the 
"executive summary," which 
should reflect the main conclu- 
sions of the body of the report, is 
described therein as merely 
"soothing" to the public and 
given to misuse by the very 
companies that Mr. Pons warns 
us against. 

We are assured that there are 
simply no alternatives that will 
take up the slack. We need to 
bear in mind several facts. First, 
nuclear power currently supplies 
less than 10 percent of the 
electrical energy in the United 
States. Second, electrical energy 
is only 50 percent of the total 
energy use. Third, such countries 
as West Germany and Sweden, 
whose unemployment rates are 
lower, currencies stronger, and 
lifestyles similar to our own, use 
about one-half of the energy per 
person as do we. Fourth, even the 
AFls-CIO recognized that, as 
reflected in its 1975 conference 
report, continued energy growth 
is not necessary, nor necessarily 



desirable, to sustain woiters* 
prosperity. Fifth, the U.S. 
Department of Energy estimates 
that we have 35 percent excess 
generating capacity, which we 
pay for through the rate base. An 
excess of 20 percent is deemed 
prudent and reasonable. Sixth, 
solar electrical generating cells, 
currently available at the high 
cost of around $12 per watt, 
should be reduced to between 
$.50 and $1 per watt by 1986 at 
which point they shall be 
competitive. 

I assert that this competitive 
cost could be achieved even 
earlier if the political decisions 
are properly made. The techno- 
logy is available. We need only 



specify the choices. Fc^r those 
argue that the "toiilinti up " u 
take time, recall that the I ^ 
increased production of aircrit- 
by 30 times dunng World War ii 
We presume that the manufii 
ture of solar cells is no more 
complex. 

Finally, to those "technotop 
worshippers-gone-beserk." vol 
gave us PBB*s, PCB's. and th. 
**Love Canal" in upstate Nev 
York. I am fed up with your 
shoddy record, your playing hs 
and loose with the only plam 
we've got! Progress? Certainh 
But we must have responsibilii' 
accountability. We can no longer 
accept the high-handed dictum 
amoral scientists who asscn thi 
"social responsibiHiv" is somi 
one else's problem. Rather let us 
have science and technology of 
for, and by the people 



Lousy first impression 



Editor: 

I am a new student at FSU, 
having gotten my undergrad 
.degree at another school. I was 
looking forward to being back in 
school. I guess after a couple 
years of being out you build up a 
lot of ideals in anticipation of that 
first day. One of those ideals 
concerned my prospective fellow 
students. Although 1 anticipated 
being around kids, 1 had sensed 
that today's students were 
somehow more nlature and 
responsible than in my day and 
. my anticipi^n heightened. 
What a shock! 

One thing I have learned is that 
the community as a whole, and 
strangers in particuiar, judge you 
(or your family, or your boyfriend, 
or your fraternity) by first 
-impressions. As 1 walked, for the 
fh^ time, through the student 
Union toward the Business 
Building the bounce in my walk 
suddenly subsided. I began to 
think, "My God. what a bunch of 
slobs?" ff you don't know what \ 
mean, try and imagine the Union 



without 2,000 Flambeaus Ihtcring 
the walk; next time you leave a 
classroom try to count the paper 
cups left squashed on the flow, 
while you 're jiving in the hallways 
take note of (hopetully) extin- 
guished, discarded cigarette 
butts on thetloor, or beer cans m 
the bushes. 

Students get reallv emotional 
about government irrcsponsihi'"' 
and uneonscionahle busint^v 
persons. We rant and rave about 
pollution, nuclear waste and the 
shah. No wonder students hast 
little power. Power derives tn-rr 
credibility. Credibilitv denvo 
from the ability to po nt vour 
finger equally as well at voursc" 
as at the system. Hou do >o 
expect the community to 
willing to let us partic'P3|| J.^ 
important issues when do 
give a rat's ass about^ 
immediate surroundings 
one issue over which 
complete control? Makes 
wonder, doesn't it? 

David H. 



I 




eople 



|fy the choices. For those who 
that the **tooling up" will 
time, recall that the U.S. 
[ased productton of aircraft 
times during World War II. 
)resume that the manufac- 
of solar cells is no more 
)lex. 

lally. to those "technology- 
liippcrs-gone-beserk," vou 
us PBB's. PCB's, and the 
Canal" in upstate New 
I am fed up with vour 
Idy record, your playing fast 
loose with the only planet 
|e got! Progress? Certainly, 
e must have responsibility, 
intability. We can no longer 
)t the high-handed dictum of 
ral scientists who assert that 
lial responsibility" is some- 
Ise's problem. Rather let us 
science and technology of. 
ind by the people. 

Mm C. Buckley 

ssion 

out 2.000 Flambeaus littering 
alk; next time you leave a 
iroom try to count the paper 
left squashed on the floor, 
e vou 're jiving in the hallways 
note of (hopefully) extin- 
Ihed. discarded cigarette 
on the tloor, or beer cans \n 
lushes. 

|u(lents get really emotional 
it government irresponsibility 

unconscionable business 

ms. We rant and rave about 
ition. nuclear waste, and 'the 
I. No wonder students have 

power. Power derives from 
ibility. Credibility derives 
the ability to point your 

r equally as well at yourselt 
t the system. How do you 
et the community to h^ 

g to let us participate m 
)rtant issues when we don t 
a rat s ass about our 
ediate surroundings — ^ ^ 

issue over which we have 
ilete control? Makes you 
ier. doesn't it? 

Hsviil H. Gfubb 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Frid^v ' 



Just like in Vietnam 



»1 

With Carter's reaffirmation of his 
>rt for the shah it is clear m what 
rection we are heading (I refer of course 
If) the Vietnam disaster). And it is evident 
though this action that Carter, who had as 

if e of Ills platforms the human rights 
isue. iMt no intention of applving that 
|i)licy m Iran. If he were even remotely 
fctice rned he would wnhdraw the over 
American troops which make up the 
ipid Readv Strike Force residing in the 
rersian (.uit. He would also stop 
ipporting the shipment of over half of our 
Irms sales to Iran which are used mostly 
^gainst the people. And he would 
ivestigate the 60 percent plus illiteracy, 
le almost non-existent sanitation, the lack 
^f workmans' insurance, the law against 
triking, the law against forming unions, 
md the law against saying anything 
letrimental against the shah. These are 
>nlv a few examples of the "move towards 
lemoeracy" that Carter is "thankfur* for. 

As to the people in Iran who arc 
lemonstrating against the shah. Carter 
:oniments. ''We know it's (the move 
rov^ards democracy) opposed by some who 
resist democratic principles." It is obvious 
that w hen thousands of people mass in the 
fvfreets in the face of machine guns and 
uinks that what is happening can Aokmger 
jbe disregarded as a disturbance created by . 
those who oppose democracy. A^d 
jeertainly when 1.5 million people 
demonstrate in a city whose population is 
four million, you can no longer dismiss 
|them as religious fanatics. . 

The truth b that the uprisings have 



nothing to4ki «iih oppoMfion to iieiiiecrac% 
— 'he oppoMtv is the* i-asi-. Cmm 
ncgkiicd to sm% m Hks Matcmem lo the 
press what the demaiNK of Hie Iranian 
P«>ple are. Tlle% consist of cmtftng martial 
law and curfcm . tkv tmstmg of tiic shah 
better working OMKHtions and higher 
^ agc«, and the mlemm of all poitcical 
prisoners (the shah*s gcnenius offer «> 
release 1.200 ipnsoners kmcs its sparfck 
when compared to the fact that there are as 
many as 100.000 political priaoners in Iran 
today). These aren't the rantings of a 
people "oppoaed to demberaHc l^nci- 
ples. they are tiie angry ilemands of 
millions who have been denied basic rights 
which we in the U.S. have come to take for 
granted. 

The tactics, used to keep Americans 
apathetic towards Iran are the same ones 
that were used in the case of Vietnam. 
And, to a degree, they are still effective. 
But if the people knew that we had men 
already stationed in the Persion Gulf, or 
that the 40.000 "miKtary advisors** are 
actually running Iran's army, navy and 
intelligence, then they would react with the 
-same vehemence as when they learned the 
truth about Vietnam. It is as true now as it 
was then that if strong opposition to 
American involvement isn't initiated we 
will be in too far to back ^wi. 

By using nothing more than common 
sense it is easy to see that the facts of the 
Iranian issue and the seriousness of it. and 
what the government is telling us just 
aren*t congruent. In short, wc are being 
lied to. Again. 

V.MacKenxie 




ABAC AUTO MRTB 




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^* ••••••••••••••• 



Exile No More 

"A Life in Poems" 



by TtatiNffril 



Awmhkh at KTt Bookston, 

ouktr's 




ot a toga party 

ilditon 

Contrary to what appears to be popular college opinion. 
Ithe Vietnam War was not the only reason to become 
[involved in this country — this world. . .and its end was 
inything but the green light to retreat back into the social 
ind political ignorance of "Beach Blanket Bingo" days. 

1 am not referring only to the recent asshole behavior of 
some FSU students during the Iranian rallies, but I mean 
lall phases — the full spectrum. Anyone would have 
[ihought that the student unrest of the late sixties would 
h.ive produced a more enlightened, intelligent society. 
Instead, it KhAs as if everyone has gone Imck to playing 
l^rankie and Annette. 

Some American students even died for change (a sad 
I ubject to have to bring up, but one that has iq^rently 

' een forgotten.) 

To those students who were yelling "Go to hell, 
juators." it's a real shame that you can't somehow be 
jturned into an old person eating Gravy Train for dinner. . . 
pr a resident of Harlem. . .or a homosexual. . .or anyone 
pther than an arrogant punk riding on the waves of your 
parents, w ho probably went into hock putting your dumb 
|iss through college. 

The world is not one big toga party and if anyone is 
J rider the impression that it is. . .well. 1 have some rather . 
^ad news for you. 

W.C. ' &vfa 




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Literacy scores improving 



(UP!) — Early scores on the state 
functional literacy test taken by 155,000 
high school juniors and seniors in October 
shows a higher passing rate than last 
years. Education Commissioner Ralph 
Turlington said yesterday. 

While only 7.000 scores have come off 
the computer, Turlington said he expects 
the final figures to show the same upswing 
in student achievement on the landmark 
test. 

Last year, so many students failed the 
exam, since renamed the Student 
Assessment Test, that parents and 
minority gtoups demanded it be eliminated 
as a requirement for a regular high school 
diploma. 

The l^istature refused to drop it and 
sichocris embarked on crasb courses of 
compensatory education in reading. 

Another inmate skips out in Starke 



writing and arithmetic which. TurKi^ton 

said, has paid off with improved scores. 
While the number of scores now 

available is small. Turlington said he 
believes the final figures, expected the end 
of the next week, will vary only slightly. 

The early scores showed that among 
seniors who repeated the test after failing 
last year, 86 percent passed the 
communications part of the test and 69 
percent passed the mathematics portion. 

Early scores of 11th graders taking tfie 
test for the first time showed 97 percent of 
the students passed in communications 
compared to 92 percent last year. In math. 
78 percent passed compared to 64 percent 
in 1977. 

The test was administered to about 
10,000 seniors and 115,000 11th graders. 



STARKE, (UPI) — The eighth inmate 
to escape from Florida State Prison and the 
adjacent Union Correctional institution in 
tile last two weeks walked off from a FSP 
farm detail yesterday and disappeared in a 
wooded area. 

A FSP spokesman identified the escaped 
prisoner as Christopher C. Mallows, 26, 
who was serving a 6-month to lO-year 
sentence for robbery in, Brevard County. 
MaHows reportedly had cmly another year 
toserve. 

He was last seen at about 2 p.m. A 
Search with bloodhounds was launched in 



the woods around the prison. 

Seven other inmates of FSP or UCI, 

including death row murderer Robert 
Lewis, have escaped since Nov. 18. Lewis, 
who walked out of FSP in a guard's 
uniform, was recaptured in Santee, S.C., 
Wednesday. 

All but one of the other escaped 
prisoners have been arrested and returned 
to prison. The only inmate still at large was 
Billy Bryant, 32, and was serving a life 
sentence for a Hillsborough armed 
robbery. 



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The finest pot is homegrown 



bif rM tafM 



Of an aspects of the good earth dttriog 
autumn — freshly mown fields, chestnuts 
and pecans, hfiiiiant leave, and the sweet 
scent of pervasive decay — the yearly fall 
harvest of sinsemiOas.ts without a doubt 
the one most eagerly anticipated by 
(tedicated maiihiana smokers. 

Sinsemittas (Spanish for seedless) is aiT 
innoculous-looking pot hybrid that contains 
as much as five times the tetrahydrocan- 
nabinal (THC, the agent which gets one 
high) of common Mexican pot. Sinsemillas 
are typically green with red or yellowish 
hair-like protrusions on the buds, or colas, 
which are so rich in THC -laden resin that it 
will literally stick to your fingers. This is the 
stuff reefer smokers' dreams are made of. 

It's even conceivable that President 




SinBemiUm hufb 



Carter and the most conservative of our 
nation's economic advisors are fans of 
sinsemillas. You see. this super hybrid can 
be grown right in the backyard (or tucked 
away on a half-acre if one is the enterprizing 
type), and with the magazine High Times 
reporting that dope smuggling has become 
a $6 billion-a-year business in Florida alone, 
whatever drug-dollars stay in this country 
are not to be scoffed at. And sinsemillas is 
becoming big business. 

Last June. Time magazine reported that 
sinsemillas growing in southern Oregon has 
turned into a business that commands S^O 
million and that has bolstered the economy 
of that inflation-ridden area. 

While no such figures area available for 
Florida, sources who understandably wish 
to remain anonymous indicate that Florida's 
illegal cash crop is Oregon's equal. 

The sources we've contacted say they 
wouldn't be surprised at a S70-million 
figure. They point to the large amounts of 
land in Florida that are ideal for growing 
large crops of the special weed — 
undeveloped government land and 
paper-company forests — as proof in part. 
Such lands are ideal since they are not 
traceable to individuals. 

The indication of Florida's widespread 
sinsemillas crop is economic. While the 
hybrid is fairly easy to obtain in this area, it 
is virtually unknown or pure myth in other 
parts of the country, and where this same 
pot sells for $1,600 a pound in Oregon and 
California, it goes for S800 to $1,000 a 
pound hereabouts. In other words, there is 
a large supply, notwithstanding the 
typically higher northern prices. 

Ironically^ growing sinsemillas is the easy 
part (see related sliity helow). The danger 
comes with harvest season, when large 
amounts of pot are gathered in one place for 
dissemination. To date in Florida, though, 
danger has yet to haunt sinsemillas growers 
in the form in intensive law enforcement. 




Danger has come, however, from the 
private sector. Private pilots, and 
cropdusters most notoriolisiy. have been 
the largest lieada<^ for growers, h isn't 
^t they feel any patriotic duty to turn ki 
the crops they spy from the air, but several 
see the chance to make a quick buck and 
have become pot pirates. And who is going 
to report a missing sinsemillas MA? 

The quality of sinsemffias eaiMC be 
underscored heavily enough, and neither 
can be the profits which one can gain by 



growing it. A healty. w^l-cmd for plam 
can produce as anich aa a pomd of 
sinsemillas, and at SI, 000 a ponod the 
income potentiiri of a sectadid half-acfc 



So let's not hear anymore derot^rtory 
statemmts aboirt domes^ pot. That 
siimemillas is m emharrasanent to the 
foreign majijuma iaqwrtod into the ooQntry 
should make us waom appreciative of good 
ol* mother earth and those good souls who 
till the sinsemillas fields. 



Homegrown: Tallahassee climate becomes sinsemillas 



by rastaftri 



The quality of growing^ marijuana is in direct proportion 
to the quality crop desired. As one strives for higher 
potency, the procedures become moie mvohfod and 
intricate. SinsemSlas, the most potent of all marijuana, 
can be grown anywhere in warn cfimales, but It reqnirea 
the most care of any pot crop. 

To grow your own sinsemillas, simply follow these 
steps and learn as you go: sprout good quality seed ^ 
w ay you would for any reefer; find a warm damp place in 
mid spring (one which will insure a good deal of sunlight 
later in the year) and plant the seeds one quarter <rf an inch 
below the surface. Plant the seeds approximately two to 
three feet apart to accmmt for future growth, and sit back 




and sm(^ a few while they sprout — in two we^ at the 
most. 

The key to mseinillas is to eliraiaale «iiy male plants 
from the population before the females are poffinated. if 
fertilization occurs, the sexual energy of tiM plant 
dissipates, then the product wttl only be as good as the 
growing condltioBs and the heredity of die plants. The 
narcotic agent in marijuana (THC) is at its highest level 
when the plant is trying roott desperately to reproduce 
itself. E&nlnating the males results hi a sex>starved 
female, hence, the highest level of THC. 

To identify male plants, look near the top of a two to 
three foot plant. On the niahi stalk, or Uvge branches, 
there will be a crotch where large leaves and branches 
shoot out from the traok. at this point there will be a 



swelling called a node. Fkon the ipde grow spearlike 
protm^ons (spurs) ooe-fomrth to one-half inch kmg. 
Nestled behind the spur are the sexual organs which 
usually can be see several weeks before the flower clusters 
appear on the brandies. 

fai the pubescent male, tiny knob-like clusters appear 
At first tfiey grow sttnigfat up, but soon roundness 
becomes more pronounced and the organs begin to hand 
down. « 

In contrast, the female organ appears as a smooth 
tapering sheath thatarchesupward b^md tfie leaf spur It 
begins very small and grows to about half the size of the 
spur. 

Remember: as in humans, the male Is round and hangs 
down, the female is an upward sheath. 



If 



I 



10 / Friday. D<=-^n^her r 1978 AT WF^'^'S END 




Average toker 
need not fear 
arrest todqy 



by Steve dollar 



Possession of an ounce of marijuana can 

still bring an offender a felony rap and up 
to ten years behind bars under Florida law. 
Yet, while pot has not been decriminalized 
in this slate, the average toker, assuming 
he is discreet, has little reason for 
paranoia. 

Unless you're flagrant in your smoking 
habits, get pulled for a traffic violation with 
reefer in hand, or deal in heavy quantities 
of the stuff, it's not likely you'll get hauled 
in for use of the drug. 

Local law enforcement officials say 
they've placed their emphasis on patching 
the big dealers and busting up organized 
smuggling operations. We're not 
concentratmg cm home smokers/' Sgt. 
Earl Bea^es <rf the Tallahassee Police 
Department Vice Squad said. 

**We won't ignore the law, but we just 
don't have the time or manpower to go 
looking for the casual user," Beagles said. 
"We're gonna go after the smugglers, the 
people who are in it for profit." 

Under Florida law, possession of less 
than five grams of marijuana is a 
misdemeanor and carries a maximum 
penalty of a year in prison and up to $1,000 
fine, or both. 

Selling pot, or possession of over five 
grams (about three joints depending on the 
roller) are both felonies with a maximum 
penalty of ten years imprisonment and an 
open-ended fine. 

Since January, Tallahassee police have 
arrested 98 persons for possession of 
marijuana. Figures are inconclusive for 
manufacture and sale. The Leon County 
Sheriff's office has made 21 arrests for 
possession and three for sale over the same 
period. The count might be higher, but 
many cases handled by local agencies fell 
over into other jurisdictions. 
, Smuggling marijuana is Florida's 
biggest industry, accounting for over $6 
billion in profit last year alone, according to 
Beagles. He estimated that police captured 
only about tO percent of that smt^^ed into 
the state. 

"It's a case where the bad guys have 
more eqai|mieBi and more money than the 
good guys," Beagles explained. 

Leon County Sheriff Ken Katsaris 



What n 



. . .how high are the angels? 

agrees: "We've got three men working on 
this (drugs) now, and we're mainly 
cimcentrating on two things: the big sales 
and the harder drugs (cociaine and heroin). 
We're limited in manpower so we have to 
have priorities." 

In order to combat the burgeoning drug 
trade, the sheriffs office, TPD and campus 
police have linked up with law enforcement 
agencies in neighboring ctmnties, 
the Florida Marine Patrol, U.S. Customs 
and the Florida Department of Criminal 
Law Enforcement to form the Big Bend 
Drug Task Force. 

The cooperative effort focuses on a 
cross-section of operations, particularly the 
Wakulla County coastline, where a lot of 
Tallahassee's reefer comes in. 

Small time dealers — those who might 
split up a pound among friends or plow 
their efforts into a small patch of 
homegrown — usually avoid the eye of the 
Task Force. 

"We get- hundreds of leads from 
different sources, it's like tying into a 
circle," Beagles said. "If you were 
breaking up a pound down into 16 baggies 
you'd be small time, but you might get 
labeled big- rime if word got to us." ' 

Kat«>aris said his ivfftce had destroyed a 
number of ptM patches, but the quantity 
'* wasn't large emmgh for us to worry 
with." 

'*We mighi get a call from a hiker or 
someone telling us they've seen a patch. 
We'll go out and pull it up, but we won't go 
out of our way liH)king for anybody. We just 
don't have the time." 





Saturday Only 

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Review 



'Spirit ' is dismal 

Mainstafe Theatre opened lu second prodoctioB of tlK 
1978-79 aom wtth a wsba of tiie liglit English comedy 
**Bfitbe SfM/' I was iramedialeiy disappointed that the 
pngnun did Ml^ecm» to author. Noel Coward, for 
Ms hriffiant and witty script. But, that onissioo was only 
the first of OMMy disappointnientt to oome. 

Appmrtiy. director Gyde Grigsby found It necessary 
for his adors to employ a stilted high-English dialect 
whidi seemed not only stiff and uncomfortable to most of 
his cast, bet afao failed to communicate many of the 
tremendous^ fnmiy lines to his audience as well. 

The prodoction runs close to three hours, including the 
two ten-minute intermissions, and the only time the pace 
quickens is when Tracy Callahan delivers her marvelous 
characterization of Madame Arcati. the slightly balmy 
medium. Callahan deserves accolades for the few bright 
moments in an otherwise bleak amateur production. 

Two of the threelead's. Susan Shashy (Ruth) and Arthur 
Olaisen (Charles), characterizations were so stiff and shrill 
they produced hysteria on the stage. They lost the 
frustration of their characters' persona and transferred it 
to the audience who vainly struggled to understand them. 

Cathy Gill as the Blithe Spirit did so many turns and 
pirouettes in her ghostly costume that the audience was 
kept giddy with her spectral flightiness. Mary Jo 
Knapstein as the overworked and dominated maid Edith, 
was also delightful. Knapstein and Callahan used their 
minor parts as vehicles to produce some fine, but brief, 
moments of acting. 

There were a few bright spots in this production. The set 
and costumes are outstanding and everyone involved with 
them deserves a special commendation for a job well done. 
They have created a stunning wardrobe that allows the 
cast the great advantage of looking the part (w hether they 
can act it or not), and the simple, yet elegant, set design 
was a joy to behold in this day and age of overdressing the 
stage. Special credit should go to the designer, Richard 
Belcher, for his tastefiil creation, that lent itself so aptly to 
the spirit and movement of the author's script. 

The special effects are nicely done all round, even 

though there are some lighting and sound problems 

rtsnlting from missed cues in the booth. 

* « • 

TIm MalMtafa pvodoction contfanna tonight thioagh 
Satardny« and Dee. 6-9, at 8:15. Tickets can be purchased 
at the dear for $2M weeknights and $3 weekends for 
vMi an Bl. And $3 weeknights and $3.50 
for the flcncrai pabiic. For information and 
eal the boi office at 644-6500. The next 
opens Feb. 8 with ' Oedipus Rex." 



Anti-smuggling funds 
needed^ says Askew 

by dennis mulqueen 

The fight against drug smnggfing in Florida thus far has 
been a losing battle. At least according to Gov. Renhia 
Askew and c^cials of the Florida P e patta ac t cf Law 

Enforcement. 

Askew, in a four-page letter to President Jnnny Carter 
released this week, termed the pvoblem a **social CMK«r 
which has reached catastrophic p rop o r t ions." 

In the letter. Askew said madjoana smuggling in Florida 
tt at least **a S6 MUiiM-a-year business. CoctiBe. 
flMthaqoalone. and POP are also ifeamatically on the rise, 
nHMle hetote renH^n a eoaatant. ^leat.** 

Attempts at coirtroHing the drug smugglmg indnstry 
have resahed in the ideate of imooeBt dtiieas 
a^eidenta% stumbling opon soch operatkMs. the 
Governor said. The results of drag tfidiiiAing in Florida 
are furthermore **too numerous to flM»tioa/* he said. 

Askew appealed to President Carter to aasist Florida m 
procuring a special $440,000 Justiee Depattneat grist to 
finance a group of special pfosecutors to help solve the 
problems of organism! crine and drug smuggling. 

The profits from such activity are often used to corrupt 
puMic officials and to finance illegithnMe husinesaet. the 
Governor said. 

Boh PenntngHin. public mformatkm officer of the 
Florida Department oi Law Enforcement, agreed widi 
Askew*s assessment of the situatkm as critical. 

**lt (the problem) li getting worse and getting more and 
more out of control.** P^ni^ton said. **and we need 
help.** 

• Pennington cited figures released by the U.S. Customs 
office in Miami indicating that in 1978. 55.4 percent of all 
the marijuana seizures in the Southeast took place in the 
southern- most ten counties of Florida. 



GRar GIFTS 



Your 

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4th Annual Appreciation Day 
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Deposit m BitUa* ia Boolutort 




MKBIAIITO : 

PARTS : 

Stuihnt Discounts I 

20B North Adams I 

224-7161 • 



M I ML It • 

TOMMY'S 



WESTWIND 

A[V\RTMENTS 
Lorge 2 Bedroom 

Townhouses furnished 
or unfurnished. 

Close to Compus 
Pool, Laundry, 

from 250.00 
^325 W. Pensacolo St 

576-6814 




ALL FA 





Ym emm «lMrly see 
thmt Hatcber Optleiaiis 

is THE place to be . 



HATCH ER 



\1 



12191^ Miccosukee Road 

* No AlVOwUmeiU iVecewary 877-0961 





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14 I Fnday, December 1, 1978 At v^^^^K'S ENn 

Do jou need extra income? 



by Howard libin 

flaml>eau staff writer 

Are you the kind of person who has 
always wanted to own your own small 
business? Do you admire an individual who 
heads up a successful enterprise? Perhaps, 
you just don't want to work for someone 
else for the rest of your life. 

If you answered affinnatlv^ to any of 
these qttestio|», then may I be so bold as. to 
suggest a caveer for you — deafing 
marijuana. 

Althon^ statistics on the subject are 
hard to obtain, there are thousands of 
persons in the United States who earn all or 
pa(»t of their living by dealing in the 
exchange of illegal commodities. How else 
can one explain what happens to the 
estimated 500 million tons of pot that 
crosses our borders each year? 

Granted, most of the money is made by 
the big guy with the political connections 
and enough money to pull off the big deals, 
but don't be discouraged, there are still 
plenty of good opportunities available for 
the small entreprenuer. 

Even a small pot dealership (under five 
pounds) requires a sizable investment, so 
before being blinded by the offer of high 
returns and easy work, consider the risk. 

Not only is the sale of marijuana illegal, 
punishable by long jail terms, but the 
Small Business Administration estimates 
that 30 percent of all n^ businesses fail 
withm their first year of operation, witii 70 
percent going under within five years. 

Therefm, like someone interested in 
starting any business, a dealer should 
conduct a feasibility study, taking a look at 
the four *T*s*'; product, price, place and 
promotion. 

•PRODUCT. Assuming that you have 
decided to sell pot, the question then 
becomes can you get it? Securing a reliable 
vendor is one of the most important aspects 
of the business, since you can't sell what 
you don't have. 

You also have to decide if you are going 
to deal exclusively in pounds, or if your 
product line will include ounces as well. 
Remember, although there is a higher 
profit margin in dealing ounces, selling one 
pound is considerably less work than 
making 16 separate sales. Then again, the 
police are most apt to seek out individuals 
dealing in pounds. 

•PRICE. The competition at the lower 
levels of the pot market is intense, 
consequently, there is continuous 
downward pressure cm prices. 

Currently, a pound commercial 
Colombian is selling for about $400 
(Mexican and Jamaican have been scarce 



during recent years.) Buying five pounds at 
a time discounts the price by as much as 
$25 a pound. The cost of exotic blends, 
such as Simsemillas, Hawaiian Kona Bud 
and super home-growns, can reach $7(X) a 
pound due to limited supply and less 
competition. 

On the retail side, an ounce of 
Colombian sells for $25, with more 
aggressive dealers asking $30. Some 
simple cakulatiims ^low us that 16 ounces 
at $25 equals $400, resulting In a net 
Income of $60. Some economists predict 
that when pound costs rise above $370 that 
the average price of an ounce will be $30, 
as pot prices traditionally rise by 
increments of $5. 

A way to increase profits in the short run 
is to sell less than weight ounce, offering as 
little as 22 grams per bag. In the long run 
this practice will cause customers to look 
elsewhere for a better buy. 
•PLACE. Another point that must be 
considered is where are you actually going 
to deal. There are two common places; in 
your home and "on the street." The choice 
depends on your lifestyle. Using your home 
has a tendency to cause problems later on, 
as customers become accustomed to 
dropping by uninvited, at all hours of the 
day and night. 

On the other hand, dealing on the street 
requires you to do a lot more traveling, 
which necessitates your having dependable 
transpcMTtation. 

One thing you might consider is not 
living with another person that deals, that 
way all the mistakes will be your own. It*s a 
bummer to get busted because of your 
roommate's carelessness. 

•PROMOTION. Do you know enough 
people who smoke to make your business 
successful? How well do you know them? 
The best habit to gel into is dealing with 
people you meet during non-pot related 
activities. Sell to people at work, school, 
clubs and church. 

Ask your closest friends if they want a 
bag, or if they want to pick one up for a 
friend. Remember, each stranger you sell 
to increases your chances of getting 
busted. At the same time, don't be 
paranoid, or you'll lose potential sales. 

Some more flamboyant promotions 
include free rolling papers, samples and 
accepting checks. 

The only aspect left to be considered is 
the financing of your ^concern. Perhaps the 
most frequent reason for business failure is 
an inadequate cash flow. Before you make 
your initial investment, be certain that you 
leave enough cash to cover your obligations 
as you liquidate your inventory. 



******* 




nORIDA mn UNIVERSITY 

i SCHOOL OF muuc 

THE WIND mmSLi 
^ SrmFHONIC BAND 

Friday Ntgbt Png/ram 

Handel's "Water Musk" (Original Versiou) 
"tartk aWt" k9 Jwry Hattknam 



BUBY MAMOUD 



fUDAYDK. 1 



1:15 pja. 





BEER SALE 



BUSOICANS $P 
Old Milwoukee $1^ 




phi tii 
12tt.4fiib 



KEGS 



Miar 3S.M 
Nbst 33*75 
ScUtz 35.40 



M 3 SM 
Bmch 33J5 

38.90 



i 



IBBBBA a^l^V ^BflB^I ^l^^flA^hAZlM 

DHHin^MQMUWIll 

PEPSI , 7-«p, Diet 7-iip, Diet PEPSI 
Cowifry Tine, Sm Cratt, AM. Daw, frwtie 
— iUI th ese only 1.39 A pdi pfc » §■ 

Qgoiettes 57* 



BEER TOWN 

MO W. TennetsM SI. 



OKN 24 HOURS 






7 MVS 



/ 



Because there's going to be nolMng slralslit about a < 

Bcry generatkm lias had their own comedy duo; the SO^s had 
Abbott & Costelo brolK up te 40's and lMn and raai^ 



CMEEdi A CNONG are the comedy team that gave 
piocess of turning on a whole goieratfoii 

awarck, including Cash Box and Billboard's 
and a Gramny for their album, **Los CochiMiar 

Noiv it's time lor a CHEECH * CHONB 



and ki die 
piclied up 



to rock comedy 



So ckm't go straight tot 




Starring Cheech Marin and 'RNmny Chong 



and Slacy Knch as Sgt. StilMtt IMtt^ 
Producfdliy Lou Adfer A Lou Lombaido 

RlRCSTRICtlD . 



CINEMA 2 

TWIN THEATRE 



Tdli. MiN 3t5-f00§ 




Srtmloy A Swuit/f 2s39 4*20 



«:» 0:01 Ml 



w 

J. 

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branl 

brh)| 
ol 

his 
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thoi| 
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the 

that I 

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^^.\\\ 

ma XI 

fill" 
Thcj 
P 

eigl 
witl 
rcfi 
cat 
a 

P 

iiii 



of 

lif 

whi 

hii 




AT WEEK'S END FfMay. 



1. 



Potp 



ourri 



Presidential puffing? 

(2NS) The Ladies Home Journal is alleging that many 
Washington. D.C. parties, including socia, functions in the 
White House itself, feature the widespread use of boOi 
marijuana and cocaine. 

Investigative reporter Maxine Cheshire, writing in The 
Joarnal. says that — in her words — the total extent of 
drug abuse in the capital were exposed, the resulting 
scandal would touch every area of government." 

According to the maga/ine: ' At the White House's first 
ja// festival on the south lawn this summer, a haze of 
marijuana smoke hung heavy under the low-bending 
branches of a magnolia tree when President Carter darted 
behind the bandstand to congratulate the musicians. One 
of the president's bodyguards." The Journal says. 

looked uncomfortable, and fpisbly fanned the tir mmA 

his boss." 

The article also charges that ambassadors and other 
embassy officials use their diplomatic immunity regularly 
to "bring cocaine, in kilo quantities worth hundreds of 
thousands of dollars into (Washington's) Dulles 
International Airport from abroad." The magazine says 
the involvement of foreign embasaes in narcotics 
smuggling "is a scandal of such monumental proporttms 
that the entire story is unlikely to be ^ as kNig as the 
U.S. wants to keq^ its allies.'* 

Special Xmas sweets 

(ZNS) Cakes, cookies and other goodies from the outside 
will be barred this holiday season to all the inmates in 
maximum security at the Colorado state penitentiary. 

Prison officials say it*s not that they're worried about 
files or weapons being smuggled inside cakes to inmates. 
They say the big problem today is dru^. 

Program dh^or Carlos Baca says that last year, up to 
eight packages of goodies a day arrived at the prison laced 
with such no-no's as marijuana and hash oil. One sender 
reportedly went so far as to open a package of crackers, 
carefully split each cracker in half, buttered the inside with 
a mind-altering substance, sealed each cracker and 
packaged them all again before sending them to an 
inmate. 

Man gives his life 

(ZNS) If you tiiiiik harsh marijuana penalties are a thing 
of the past in tbe United States. KHen to this one: 

The Nevada State Supreme Court u|^kl a sentence of 
life in prisop Uiat was handed daiwn to a Ib-year-old man 
who was convicted of giving less tluui an ounce of pot to a 
h%h school student. 

Stanley Pickard of Hawthorne. Nev.. is currently 



servkig a life sentence in the Nevada Slate PM^atiary at 
Carson City. Pickard was convicted of providing some 
marifuana at m» etefe to a 14-year-old high school 
student who later became the diief prosecution « itaess 
against Mm. 

Under tlie Nevada tew, any person who provides pot to 

any other persoQ who is under the age of 21 Is subject to a 
mandatory life sentence in prison. Pickard will be eligible 
for parole after serving a minimum seven years in prison. 

The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana 
Laws terms the penidty in this case "an outrage." NORML 
attorneys say that Nevada currently maintains the 
harshest marijuana penalties in the United Sutes. 

Aloha Hawauan pot 

(ZNS) Some 100 federal officers representmg six 
different government agencies have launched a new series 
of raids on the marijuana-producing arcai of the island of 
Hawaii. 

The current campaign is the second round of so-called 
"Operation Green Harvest " It reportedK invoKes federal 
otTicers. as well as deputies from tour Hav\aiian counties, 
who are utilizing helicopters, airplanes and boats in one of 
the biyteest pot crackdowns in Hawaiian history. 

After the first da\ i^t the raid, police confirmed seizing 
1.000 poinuis of plants and 43 pounds ot processed 
nianjuana. Hawaiian marijuana, ^^hich is among the most 
expensive and potent weed in the world, is tn the midst of 
its peak harvest season. 

Reefer here to stay 

(High Times) Marijuana seems to be firmly established 
as a "permanent recreational drug" in America, according 
to University ot Wisconsin research reported in the 
January High Times. 

The survey shows that 56 percent of all high school 
seniors have tried i^rass at least once. 10 percent are daily 
smokers, and almost none believes that grass is physically 
harmful. Since the use of all other psychedelics has either 
levelled off or diminished among students in recent years, 
it looks as though pot is dcfmitely here to stay. 



r 




Northwood 
386-6735 

Timberlane 

385-0617 




wiymupfOR 

CHRISTMAS! 



PUMA ROCKETT kidies running shoe 

was 26'' NOW 19» 

JUST ARRIVED... 

TREO II RAQUETBAU SHOE 1 

NEW! 

NEW ZEAUND SPLITS RUNNING SHOR 



AUCiUA 

CANOE IRIP 4 PICNIC 
Silarilay Die 2 

lit M pMfIt tt i|pi ip fit tt |tl 

^PT'^A^ 4444710 



AcaieerinkM^ 
without lawscbool 

Jual thrac ffiontha of Mhf at Tilt 
rV hmiliile for Paralegal Trainfiig in 

Philadelphia, you can have an exciting and r e a w di w j 
career m law or business — without taw sctxx>l 

As a lawyer s assistant you will be performirig 
i many of the duties traditionally handled 
only by attorneys. Arnl at The Institute for Paralegal 
Training, you €wi pick one oi icven different 9nm of 
taw lo fltiidy. (Jpon completion of your troining. The 
Inttitule's ttfiique Placement Servict wiN find you a 
responsible and challenging job in a law fifm. bank or 
corporation in the city of your ctxMce. 

T'he Institute ^ Paralegal Training is the 
nation s first and most respected school for 
paralegal training. Since 1970. we ve placed over 
^,300 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide 

If you re a senior of high academic standing 
and looking for an above average career. 
corMact your placement ofRoa fof an kiMwIaw wMh 

ntative. 

We wiU Wait your 



Wadiiatday. 



TraMffig' 




23» Sowai 17* 
PtiiUdilpiiia^ 19109 

(219173 



Approved by the ArrMrncan B«r Auoci«lion 





l/*U UCf- SOUd/ ^ 

4 ^€AUk*. 



Oiic^^ all itUi. 



^ImshM 4 ft a wii |i# <^ a ^ TAsuJmm 



U I Friday, December 1, 1978 AT WEE^'^ ^"'^ 

Do you need extra income? 



I»y hmrard Hbfai 



Are you the kind of person who has 
always wanted to own your own small 
business? Do vou admire an individual who 
heads up a successful enterprise? Perhaps, 
you just don't want to work for someone 
else for the rest of your life. 

If you answered affirmatively to any of 
these questions, then may I be so bold as to 
suggest a career for you — dealing 
marijuana. 

Although statistics on the subject are 
hard to obtain, there are thousands of 
persons in the United States who earn all or 
paTt of their living by dealing in the 
exchange of illegal commodities. How else 
can one explain what happens to the 
estimated 500 miUioa tons of pot that 
crosses our borders each year? 

Granted, most of the money is made by 
the >ig guy with the political connections 
and enott^ money to pnfl off the big 4eals, 
hat don't be disconraged, thete are stiU 
plenty of good opportiiskies avi^aMe for 
the smafi eBtreptenoer. 

Even a small pot dealershq> (nnder five 
pounds) requhres a sizaMe investment, so 
before being bhn^d by the offer of high 
returns and easy work, consider the risk. 

Not only b the sale of marijuana illegal, 
punishable long jail terms, but the 
Small Business Administration estimates 
that 30 percent of att new businesses ful 
within their first year of operation, with 70 
percent going under within five years. 

Therefore, like someone interested in 
starting any business, a dealer should 
conduct a feasibility study, taking a look at 
the four "P's"; product, price, place and 
promotion. 

•PRODUCT. Assuming that you have 
decided to sell pot, the question then 
becomes can you get it? Securing a reliable 
vendor is one of the most important aspects 
of the business, since you can't sell what 
you don't have. 

You also have to decide if you are going 
to deal exclusively in pounds, or if your 
product line will include ounces as well. 
Remember, although there is a higher 
profit margin in dealing ounces, selling one 
pound is considerably less work than 
making 16 separate sales. Then again, the 
police are most apt to seek out individuals 
dealing in pounds. 

•PRICE. The competition at the lower 
levels of the pot market Js intense, 
consequently, there is continuous 
downward pressure on prices. 

Currently, a pound of commercial 
Colombian is selling for about $400 
(Mexican and Jamaican have been scarce 



during recent years.) Buying five pounds at 
a time discounts the price by as much as 
$25 a pound. The cost of exotic blends, 
such as Simsemillas, Hawaiian Kona Bud 
and super home-growns, can reach $700 a 
pound due to limited supply and less 
competition. 

On the retail side, an ounce of 
Colombian sells for $25, with more 
aggressive dealers asking $30. Some 
simple calculations show us that 16 ounces 
at $25 equals $400, resulting in a net 
income of $60. Some economists predict 
that when pound costs rise above $370 that 
the average price of an ounce will be $30, 
as pot prices traditionally rise by 
increments of $5. 

A way to increase profits in the short run 
is to sell less than weight ounce, offering as 
little as 22 grams per bag. In the long run 
this practice will cause customers to look 
elsewhere for a better buy. 
•HACE. Another point that must be 
considered is where are you actually going 
to d^. There are two common places; in 
yoor home and **on the street/* The choice 
depends on your lUestyle. Using your home 
has a tendency to cause prdblemrlater on, 
as customers become accustomed to 
dropping by unimdted, at all hours of the 
day and night. 

On the other hand, dealing on the street 
requires you to do a lot more traveling, 
which necessitates your having dependable 
transportation. 

One thing you might consider is not 
living with another person that deals, that 
way all the mistakes will be your own. It*s a 
bummer to get busted because of your 
roommate's carelessness. 

•PROMOTION. Do you know enough 
people who smoke to make your business 
successful? How well do you know them? 
The best habii to get into is dealing with 
people you meet during non-pot related 
activities. Sell to people at work, school, 
clubs and church. 

Ask your closest friends if they want a 
bag, or if they want to pick one up for a 
friend. Remember, each stranger you sell 
to increases your chances of getting 
busted. At the same time, don't be 
paranoid, or you'll lose potential sales. 

Some more flamboyant promotions 
include free rolling papers, samples and 
accepting checks. 

The only aspect left to be considered is 
the financing of your Concern. Perhaps the 
most frequent reason for business failure is 
an inadequate cash flow. Before you make 
your initial investment, be certain that you 
leave enough cash to cover your obligations 
as you liquidate your inventory. 



mi mi 1^ n ¥y ^ ^ iry irv lAi lAi ir¥ ^ 1^ ir¥ lAi ^ w im irv ^ 



..A AAA Ik^^^^..^ 



^ SCHOOi Of iMUSIC 

pnitnts in conewf 

WiWNDiNSmBLi 
•Mf Sir/NPNONIC BAUD 

Car/ Bierrgaard, coadvcfor 
ftirfay Might Pngnm 

fMefs "Wofer Mwsk" (Original Versm) 
"§artk M$" ky Urn HwtdbuM 

mr OMiMOND nu>4r occ. i 8.15 p. 




mm 



BEER SALE 



BUSCHCANS S]"* 
OMMawoiikM $1** 




phi tax 



MIer 35.90 
Nbrt 33J5 
Sdiilz »M 



KEGS 

33J5 
MidMbb 3t 



PEPSI , 7-up, Diet 7hv, Diet PEPSI 
Country Time, Sun Crest, Mt. Dew, Froitie 

- All these only 1.39 dx pdt H"* «n 

Ggarottes 57^ 

BEER TOWN 

640 W. T 

OPEN 24 HOURS 




Because there's going to be nollriiig alM a Cinn 

Eiciy generation lias had thtir iwn cooM^d^ 
Abbott & CbstelD brolie up die 4y»aHd WntfB and l.jwiii raal^iiaciMrod^gSCrib 

CWBCll ft CHONG hai« hdped make the 70^8 go M 

CICECH ft CHONG are the comedy team that ga(« birth to rock c» 
ami in the piocess ol timiing on a whole genefatfon. sold im ■ 
piciied up numerous awarck, including Cash Box and Billboard's 
and a Grainmy for their album, *tjos CodMoaT 

1^ it's time for a CHEECH ft CHONG HMMie. 

C ft Cs M MCNCr* «« make you fed wqr ftMiiL 

So don't ga straight toaae thia OMNta! 





l^gamountl % i u ija »ft HB ^ ^ 
AJLoMAdferProdMEtpi 

Up 




and Stacy Keach as Sgt. 
Produced by Lou 



Marin and Tommy Cheng 
Edw Adams Strodier Martin 

^Mfiiin by %auny Cheng ftCheech Maria 
DirecledbyLottAdkr RmaiMone 



RESTRICTED 



CINEMA 2 

TWIN THEATRE 



_T«lla. tUW 385-9000 




fini Mkf 1:00 & 9:50 
4:20 «:10 I.-00 9:50 



AT WEEK'S END ^ndav DAcemht- ' i978 ' 



P 



o^poum 



Presidential puffing? 

(ZNS) The Ladies Home Journal is alleging that many 
Washington. D.C. parties, including sociai functions in the 
White House itself, feature the widespread use oi boUi 
marijuana and cocaine. 

investigative reporter Maxine Cheshire, writing in The 
Journal, says that — in her words — *if the total extent of 
drug abuse in the capital were exposed, the resuttiiig 
scandal would touch every area of government." 

According to the magazine: **Al the White House's first 
jazz festival on the south lawn tte smnmer, a haze of 
marijuana smoke hung heavy under the low-bending 
branches of a magnolia tree when President Carter darted 
behind the bandstand to congratulate the musicians. One 
of the president's bodyguards." The Joomal says, 
'looked uncomfortable, and fpebly fanned the air around 
his boss." 

The article also charges that amb«»adors and other 
embassy officials use their <%liiinitic immontty regularly 
to *'bring cocaine, in kilo quantities worth hundreds of 
thousands of dollars into (Washington*s) Dulles 
International Airport from abroad.'* The magazine says 
the involvement of foreign embasdes in narcotics 
smuggling * is a scandal of such monumental proportions 
that the ei^lre story is unlikely to be told as long as the 
U.S. wants to keep its aUies." 

fecial Xmas sweets 

(ZNS) Cakes, cookies and other goodies from the outside 
will be barred this holiday season to all the inmates in 
maximum security at the Colorado state penitentiary. 

Prison officials say it's not that they're worried about 
tiles or weapons being smuggled inside cakes to inmates. 
They say the big problem today is drugs. 

Program director Carlos Baca says that last year, up to 
eight packages of goodies a day arrived at the prison laced 
with such no-no's as marijuana and hash oil. One sender 
reportedly went so far as to open a package of crackers, 
carefully split each cracker in half, buttered the inside with 
a mind-altering substance, sealed each cracker and 
packaged them afl again before sending them to an 
inmate. 

Man gives his life 

(ZNS) If you think harsh marijuana penalties are a thing 
of the past in the United States, listen to this one: 

The Nevada State Supreme Court upheld a sentence of 
life in prison that was handed down to a 26-year-old man 
who was convicted of giving less than an ounce of pc^ to a 
high School student. 

Stanley Pickard of Hawthorne. Nev.. is currently 



serving a life sentence in the Nevada Slate Penitenti aty at 
CarsoQ City. Pickard was eoAvtcted of providuig some 
mari^ana M no eliarge to a 16-year-old high school 
Student who later became the diief prosecution witness 
against him. 

Vnder the Nevada law. any person who provides pot to 
any other person who is under the age of 21 is subject to a 
mandatory life sentence in prison. Pickard will be eligible 
for parole after serving a minimum seven years in prison. 

The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana 
Laws terms the penalty in this case "an outrage." NORML 
attorneys say that Nevada currently maintains the 
harshest marijuana penalties in the United States. 

Aloha Hawaiian pot 

(ZNS) Some 100 federal officers representing six 
different government agencies have launched a new series 
of raids on the marijuana-producing areas of the island of 
Hawaii. 

The current campaign is the second round of so-called 
"Operation Green Harvest." It reportedly involves federal 
officers, as well as deputies from four Hawaiian counties, 
who are utilizing helicopters, airplanes and boats in one of 
the biggest pot crackdowns in Hawaiian history. 

After the first day of the raid, police confirmed seizing 
1.000 pounds of plants and 43 pounds of processed 
marijuana. Hawaiian marijuana, which is among the most 
expensive and potent weed in the world, is in the midst of 
its peak harvest season. 

Reefer here to stay 

(High Times) Marijuana seems to be firmly established 
as a "permanent recreational drag" in America, according 
to University of Wisconsin rcsearrii reported in the 
January High Times. 

The survey shows that 56 percent of all hig^ school 
seniors have tried grass at least once* 10 percent are daily 
smcAers. and almost none believes that grass is physically 
harmful. Since the use of all other psychedelics has either 
levelled off or diminished among students in recent years, 
it looks as though pot is definitely here to stay. 




Northwood 



TImberlane 
385-0517 




SAU! 



WARM UP FOR 

CHRISTMASl 



PUMAROCKETT ladies nmning shoe 

was 26* MOW IV* 

JUST ARRIVED... 

TREOII RAQUETBAUSHOI 19" 

NEW! 

NEW ZEAUND SPim RUNNING SHORTS. 



AUCUIA 

CANOE TRIP ft PKMC 
Mnviaay uac* a 

M M pMfk to sipi ip lit !• ftl 

col ^^:^^^^^0-^- «44^10 



Acaieer inlaw- 
without lawscbool 



After |u8t ttwne nfionths of Hiidhf at The 
fx Inslilyle for PMtogal Training in 

Philadelphia, you can have an exciting and rewarding 
career in law or business — without law school. 

As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing 
fx many of the duties traditionally handled 
only by attorr>eys. And at The Institute for Paralegal 
Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of 
law to study. Upon connpletion of your training. The 
Inititute's unique Placement Seivice wiM find you a 
responsible and challenging job in a law firni, bonk or 
GOiporation in the city of your ctKNce. 

he Institute for Paralegal Training is the 

nation's first and most respected school for 
paralegal training. Since 1970. we ve placed over 
2»300 graduates in over 83 cities nationwide. 

f you re a senior of high academic standing 
, and looking for an above average career, 
contact your placment office for an interview with 
our representative. 

. win visit your campus on: 



T 

I n 

9' 

I! 



for 

Paralegal 

Trafaikig* 




235 South 1 7th Street 
PMtoMphie. PA 19103 
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.happening^ 

Fiye, FftI Mhumb and friends 

perform their own style of music Sunday night at 7:30 in 
Moote Aodilorivm in a benefit for the Catfish Alliance. 
Rrye, who buih a large following in Tallahassee several 
years i^^has just returned from Washington. Tickets are 
$2.50 and are a van able at the CPE office and Co-op books. 

The FSU Mainstage prodoction of Noel Coward 
**Blithe Spirit" runs this weekend and next with shows 
tonight and tomorrow night beginning at 8:15. Tickets are 
$2.50 weekdays and $3 weekends for students with an ID, 
and $3 and $3.50 respectively for the general public. For 
reservations call the Theater Box Office at 044-6500. 

Seven Hills Holistic — Arts Center will sponsor a 
workshop by Dr. Richard Sword on "Basic Tools for 
Holistic Health Evaluation" tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 5 
p.m. at 1806 Sunset Drive. Dr. Sword holds a doctorate in 
psychology and acupuncture and is director of the 
Gainesville Healing Arts Exchange. Fee for the workshop 
is $20. 

Today is the hist day to pick up tickets for Ravi 

Shankar's Dec. 9 artist's series performance at FSU. 
Tickets are available at the central ticket office in the 
Union; $3 for students and $5 for the general public. 

The School of Musk recital series contlimM tiife 
weekend with two performances tonight and one each 
Saturday and Sunday. Anne Warf wiU give her master's 
recital on organ at 8:15 tonight in Opperman Music Hall, 
while the FSU Wind £nsemble and. Symphonic Band 
perform in Ruby Diamond Auditorium at the same time. 
The FSU Jazz Ensemble performs tomorrow night at 8:15 
in Ruby Diamond, and the Women's Glee Gub will sing 
Christmas vespers there Sunday at 5 p.m. 

Viaiteffs to tiie Stopim Foster CeaiBr at WUte S^rii^ 
this wed»ad can hear the «a»ial presentatwn <rf 
Christmas Music aad see tlie aamud Christmas cn^ 
show both on Saturday and Sondiqr. The Lake City 
Community College Bell Ringers will open ^e festivities 
Saturday at 2 p.m. when they mate theh* tenth annual 
appearance at tiie event. 

J J. ZMkaiy*t mianiit wll ufommt a tioMfit dfamer 
for **SomeplaceElse" runaway center Sunday from 5-10 
p.m. The $10 price includes meal, salad, dessert and two 
free drtid[s. There will be door prizes and live 
entertainment. 

The Taipoa dab la iwvfaig a pobHc performance 
tomorrow m Montgomery pool at 6:30 p.m. Admission is 
$.50 for students and $1 for the general public. 

music 

Mosic Cans can find the usual assortment of country, 
bluegrass, jazz and rock and roll this weekend with a whole 
cross-section of groups performing all over town. 

Labamba will be playing their own brand of jazz-rock 
tonight and Saturday night at Tommy's Deep South Music 
Hall, while local jazz buffs can hear it straight at Ricco's 
Lounge tonight and Saturday with the Sound Affair, 
featuring Lindsay Sargeant and Jim Crozier. 



bead downtown 

where they can find Don Dunaway at Powell's Sub and Pub 
and TaUahasse's Pietce IVttts at the AOey. Both 
peffot mers play tonigbt and Saturday. 

Del Saggs wmA Jack mUk an Hfl UmmA-mp al Aa 
Capitol Inn on the Apaladiee Parkway, pbiying some 
laid-back couatry-fbvoted tunes ton%ht ooly to soodie the 
workday bhies. 

As always, the PaHlaiii DawMlakn Battle Oab wfl be 
open, with Hutch and Hoss supplying bluegrass and loc* 
music tonight and Saturday night. It's all night so it'sgot to 
be all right, since the band won't finish *til 4 or 5 a.ra. 

Brown shoes don't make it, so poifeh yoar heels ap if yoa 
want to boogie down to Tally's discos. Big Daddy's, the 
Cantina. Byron's and the Sea Fox will have plenty of 
throbbing action and City of Night will be pulsating all 
night long to. boot. 

fUcks 

Maaia AadBailaBi^ $1.50 Friday — "Loc^g for Mr. 
GoodbM^/' 7:30, 10. Satuiday ~ "Wizards," 7:30, 9:15, 
11. 

FiarMai $.99. **Eyes of Laura Mars/' 7:40, 9:40. 

Narthwaai Mai: "Goin' Soutii," 7:30, 9:30. 

TaBahasurr MaB, ClucMa it "Who is Kittmg tiie Great 
Chefs of Europe," 7:20, 9:40. OaaaMilI: **Up In Smoke," 
8,9:50. 

Capital CfaieBMs: "Animal House," 7, 9:30; "Boys from 
Brazil." 7, 9:30; "Heaven Can Wait." 7:25. 9:25; "The 
Wackiest Wagon Train in the West," 7:40, 9:30. Midnight 
^how: "Rocky Horror Picture Show." 

Varsity Triple: "Halloween," 8, 9:50; "Midnight 
Express," 7:45, 10; **Which Way is Up" and "Blue 
Collar," 8 and 10. 

Miride Triple: "Message from Space." 7:10, 9:15; 
"comes a Horseman." 7:20. 9:35; "Foul Play." 7:30. 9:45. 

Capital Drive In: "The End," and "White Buffalo," 
starting at 7:30. 



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Tape preserves civil rights decade 



by jkn cox 

A group of local citizens who 20 years ago battled to 
frustrate, moderate or propel the civil rights cause met in 
cooperation this week with a colleagae who wishes to 
preserve a record of then- struggle. 

Gathered in Longmire Lounge Wolnesday n%ht were 
many of the principal figures from tliat decade of kicti 
racial ^fe which be^ w^ a succeatfol six-month bus 
boycott by local Macks in 1956. The group inchi^ such 
prominent figures as th«i-€kyv. Leroy Collins. Malcolm 
Johnson, former editor <rfThe TaUahassee Democrat, who 
editorialized against the civil rights movement at the time, 
and Rev. C.K. Steele, who helped to establish the 
Southern Christian Leadership Conference. 

These and odier local citizens who were involved in the 
decade of civil rights turmoil have been recorded in an oral 
history just completed by FSU religion professor Jackson 
Ice. 

Ice's taped history includes more than 40 interviews and 
is now available at both the FSU and FAMU library 
archives. The study was done for the FSU Center for the 
Study of Southern Culture and Religion and was made 
possible through a small grant from the Rockefeller 
Foundation. 

"We are living among giants here in Tallahassee." Ice 
said of the group. "These are all extraordinary people who 
are successes for having participated in something ihey 
felt essentially good and necessary.'* 

Gov. Collins, whose moderate position Ice maintains 
helped Tallahassee escape the bloodshed experienced in 
other Southern towns, described his six-year governorship 
simply as "pretty rough.** 

Besides crosses burned on the front lawn of the 
governor* s mansion and eggs thrown at its d(x>rs, Collins 
recalled one incident which he felt summed up his period 
as governor. 

"We had a policy (for state executives) back then of 
going out to the FAMU homecoming,*' he said. "Relations 
were so chilled at tiiis time that I and one staff person were 
the only whites I think that attended" the 1956 
homecoming. Collins said he was criticized by many for 
going. 

More interesting,, though, were the remarks of Malcolm 
Johnson. The former editor had put his criticism of the 
civil rights movement in print, so he had been unpopular 
with movement supporters during that' era. 

ice introduced Ji^nson as **a man with whom 1 have 
disagreed. . .but who has formed opinion in Tallahassee 



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**ln spite of all the yelling and shouting that went on," 
Johnson said, "I am proud to say that there was not a 
single bloody nose during the entire period." 

Johnson described his interview with Ice as having 
exposed his conscience on the touchy issue, but concluded, 
"I do know this: that this town is a far better place to live 
for far more people than ever before.'* 

Most of the people present, including Rev. Steele, were 
members of the Tallahassee Inter-Civic Council during this 
period of turmoil. The ICC. working with students from 
FAMU. supported the bus boycott aimed at eliminating 
the back-of t he-bus laws then prevalent. 

Steele said not only was' Tallahassee a better place to 
live because of the ICC and other civil rights organizations, 
but that moreover Tallahassee was a city which "had read 
the writing on the wall." It was **a message to the 
nation." he concluded. 



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December 1. 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Martial arts 



from page 1 



awareness of situations she might encounter. She gets a 
chance to practice handling things she's afraid of.*' 

One common criticism of martial arts classes for women, 
however, is that they breed unjustified bravado. 

"I'm concerned about women who take five karate 
lessons. " says FSU officer SeweU, "and then think they 
can defend themselves." 

And at the Leon County Sheriffs Department, crime- 
prevention specialist Murdaugh declares, "No martial 
artist is any good unless he's studied for years.** 

"Even victims with extensive training in martial arts are 
not always successful with qukk chops or kicks to vital 
spots on the body," cautkms the handbook "Selual 
Assault" pi|t CN^ by the dlGm of Florida's Attorney 
General. 

But if you are gmag to Ught, the text continues, you can 
"goitly put your hands on the assailant's face and get 
your thumbs near his eyes, then press his eyeballs with 
your thumbs as hard as you can. This wffl pet the assaSant 

into shodL and could bfind huB." 

The same booklet further advises a woman to "grab hii 
testicles (not his penis, since k will not be effective), 
squeeze as hard as you can and jerk or pull to inflict 
immobilizing pain." 

That eyeball attack is a modified version of a martial 
arts approach known as Eagle's Gaw. Karate instructor 
Williams thinks other skills can easily be lifted from the 
martial arts repertoire. 

"There are lots of things you can know, even without 
training," she stresses. "For instance, a lot of people need 
to learn where to kick or hit, what are the vulnerable 
parts." 

"I would tend to de-emphasize the groin, and 
emphasize more the knees, eyes and throat," she says. "A 
woman can break a man's leg by kicking him hard in the 
knee (when he's standing). And a kick in the shin can be 



effective, too, especially if she's wearing shoes. 

"Then there's what we call 'escape through the open 
gate.' Assume a man is holding you by the wrists. If you 

simply try to pull away, you'll fail. 

"But the weakest part of a grip is the thumb. If I w te a d 
of fighting, you casually lift your hand to your ear, you 
exert force against the thumb and slip right out of his grip. 

"Muscle for muscle," acknowledges Williams, "a 
woman is not as strong as a man. But the thing she has on 
her side is a psychological element of surprise. And she 
generally can move with more speed and agility than a 
man. 

"A guy who attacks a woman, especially if she appears 
ultra-feminine, does not expect her to be strong. If she can 
deflect a blow, or incapacitate him in one way or another, 
he is taken aback. It may give her time to get away." 

Leslee Williams is a karate expert. She moves with great 
finesse. By now she knows she could hurt most 
challengers; a big^ worry is how not to kill them. Would 
she ote her karate skilk to counter an assailant? 

"My first response would not necessarily be a i^ysical 
one,'* she replies. 

"It depends on the avenue of attack. If you see tiie guy 
coming, you may be able to deflect a hkm or deliver one. 
But if the guy's already got hold of you, you may have to 
talk him out of it instead. 

"A woman does have power enough to deflect various 
attacks, and she doesn't have to study the martial arts to 
do so," says Williams. "But there are techniques that can 
be taken from all the martial arts: karate, jiu-jitsu, judo, 
aikido. Any woman can learn them. 

"Most of the women who fend off attacks are not martial 
artists." she continues. "They don't need to be. But a 
woman needs to keep her presence of mind to pick the best 
response; and she needs to learn the capabilities of her 
own body.'* 



Sheriff: Keep sex offenders in jail 



(UPI) — Releasing mentally disordered sex offenders 
on work-release is like a time bomb, Alachua County 
Sheriff Lu Hendry said yesterday; "you don't know when 
it's going to go off." 

Hendry was speaking at a Department of Health and 
Rehabilitative Services public hearing. He was joined in 
his opposition by officials from Gainesville and Gadsden 
County ^ where two of the three state hospitals housing 
retarded sex offenders are located. 

The third state facility is located at Pembroke Pines in 
Broward County. 

Hendry launched into the troubles officials have had 
with typical work release programs, and said if sex 
offenders are allowed on the streets the people will be 
exposed to "imminent and immediate danger." 

"I'm sure rehabilitation is a very noble thing," 



Hendry said, "(but) even one child molested and one 
woman raped is not worth the whole program." 

The program springs forth from a bill passed xm the 
next to last day of the 1977 legislative session that calls 
on HRS to develop guidelines to administer the 
work-release program. It would allow sex offenders 
being treated at the three hospitals, North^ Florida, 
Chattahoochee and South Florida, to be put on 
work-release programs if they have responded well to 
therapy. , 

Sen. Pete Skini^r» l>-La|e City, said the legislature 
made a ''iast minute blunder" when it hastily passed the 
bin which was presented as "non-controversial.*'* 

The measure passed 32-0 in the Senate and 108-1 in 
the House. 



In Brief 



STUDENTS WITH A liTTtC KNOW- 
LEDGE German . and interested in 
becoming Dartmouth tutors are invited to a 
w(»rkshop today at 3 p.m. in Boom 230 
IKffenbaugh. Foe mere information, call 
Dr. Helga Kraft at 644-3727. 

DE. AARON WltDAVSKY wffl speak 
today at. 3 p.m. in Room 220 Busmess on 
the topic ;*A Budget for All Seasons." 
Wildavskyv a former dean of the graduate 
school of public policy at the University of 
California at Berkeley, was voted the 
second most influential political scientist in 
the country recently in a poll taken by a 
political science magazine. 

"THE MONSTER IN OUR MIDST: a 
Psychological View of Murder, Violence 
and Other Forms of Deviance" is the topic 
of a thesis FSU criminology professor 
Alexander Bassin will present today at 1 
p.m. in Room 154 Bellamy. He will 
accompany his talk with transparencies 
and slides. 

THE COALITION FOR IRANIAN 



DEMOCRACY wUl hold an organizaticmal 
meeting this Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in 
Bellamy. The room number of the regular 
meetings had not been determined at press 
time, but will be posted in the first floor 
lobby. 

••EDUCATION AND THE DEVELW- 
MENT OF CraSClOUSaVBSS" is the focus 
of a free symposium Sunday beginning at 
noon in Room 143 Bellamy. A variety of 
transcendental meditatkm topics wUl be 
discussed. 



Weather 



will remain cloudy today, with 
occaskmal periods of rain expected. Partial 
clearing is expected tomorrow, with a 
slight chance of showers. Lows will be in 
the upper 50s and low 60s, with highs 
today near 70 and in the mid 70s tomorrow. 
The rain probability is 50 percent today, 30 
percent tonight. Wmds will be variable 
around 10 m.p.h. At the coast, winds will 
be variable around 10 knots, with seas two 
to four feet. Scattered showers and a few 
thundershowers are expected. 



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How about Disney Worii? 

CEO has put together a budget-minded mini-vaa- 
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to take advantage of this trip to get away from the t)ooks The 
mini-vacation is priced for studentt — only $15 for round-tnp 
transportation to Walt Oianey WovM. There \m« be two trips, one 
on Decemt)er 2, (Saturday) and December 3 (Sunday). They wi 
leave from behind the FSU Poet Offiee at 6 am. and return at TO 
p.m. that night. 

Reservations can be molie by catling 644 JNO . Tickets can be 
picked up today. The tkskeie mey be peid in ful or e deposit of (6 
can be paid until the departure date. Tickets can be purchased at 
the CEO table in the Union Courtyard today only. Seeting is iimitsd, 
so get your tickets early. 




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$5.00 



Also Serving 

PIZZA 




CO-OP RECORDS 

648 W. TennMsee 

For every 4 8 tracks purchased, you'll 
get a FREE 8 track carrying case, 
(while supply lasts) 

LP's List $7" ONLY $4^* 

^ UUi ka^ 4A» ieweU /i/uce^ in ike UaU. 



10^ Mon. - Sat 



12-6 Sundays 



1. 1978 / 21 



Defense, Brown propel Seminoles 
over fiesty Western Kentucky, 70-59 




^ by Sidney bedingfield 

flambeau sports editor 

Riding the shoulders of Murray Brown on offense and 
employing a tenacious defense, the Florida State 
Seminoles outlasted a fiesty Western Kentucky team in a 
70-59 win before 1.941 fans in Tully Gym last night. 

The win improved FSU's record to 2-0 while the 
Hilitoppers fell to 1-2 on the young season. 

The Hilitoppers ran a very deliberate, pattern-oriented 
dffense throughout the game, and seemed to have FSU 
plaving into their hands as the Seminoles trailed most of 
' . first half. 

The Seminoles shot poorly in the first half — 44 percent 
from the field — and the Hilitoppers' deliberate play 
seemed to be giving FSU trouble. The inside work of 
Murray Brown, who at times dominated the boards, kept 
the Seminoles close and then provided the spark necessary 
to propel the team ahead by one at halftime. 

Brown finished the game, with 21 points, 11 rebounds, 
two blocked shots and received a standing ovation when 
fouling out with only 40 seconds remaining in the game. 

The Hilltc^ipers .eibtbited a balanced attack featuring 
i^itrtcate patterns, and were led by 6-5 guard Troy Trumbo 
with 14 and 6-1 point guard Kurtis Townsend with 10. 

Mickey Dillard and Ed Chatman f(rilowed Brown for FSU 
with 17 and 16 points respectively, although Dfflard shot 
poorly %nd generally had to work hard for every point he 
made, something FSU coach Joe Williams was impressed 
with. 

* 'Dillard's shooting was off but he made up for it in 
other ways — like playing good defense and forcing 
Western Kentudcy to guard him on offense," Williams 
said. 

Williams said that whUe his team didn't play well during 
the first half, they never lost their intensity, aikl that made 

the difference in the ball game. 

* 'Right now we are trying to correct our mistakes — like 
the nine turnovers in the first half," Williams said. **But 
even with those mistakes we were able to get a one point 

lead because we out-hustled them.** 
Leading 29-28 at the half, the Seminoles pulled to a nine 



Sorry, Pernell 



Perneff Tookes (54) 



photo by sally sandusky 




2 
o 

a 




Murray Brown 

. . Jed all scorers with 21 points 

point lead at 43-34 before mistakes and cold shooting 
allowed the Hilitoppers to cut it to one. At that point 
Williams called time. 

**That was the wUy time I really began to worry," 
Williams said. **But we regrouped and took control of the 

turn to BASKETBALL page 23 



Authentic Chinese and Japanese 
Cuisine m 

Banrtxx) Tea Hoiiae 

Tallahassee Malt, Gayfer's Concourse 
Mon. -Sat. 11:00 AM ~ 8:00 PM 
385-0887 



Authentic Chinese and Japanese 
Cuisine 



r 



Bamboo Tea House and Gift Shop 
Northwood Mall, Center Concourse 
Mon. -Sat. 11:00 AM - 8:00 PM 
386 2324 



I Authentic Chinese and Japanaia % 



224-9099 



Bamboo Garden 
112 6 East Sixth Ave. 
Luncheon Buffet 

Mon. - Fri. 1 1 :45 AM - 2:00 PM 
Dinner Mon.-Thurs. 5:00 PM - 10:00 PM 

Fri. -Sat 5:00PM- 11:00PM 



. . ,mcomctiy ident^ as Murmv Brown in 
yesterday's Ffambeau 



— —-I -^f^^^^^^^^^^^f^^^^ 



warn : 



1990-40 N Monroe 
NORTHWOOD MALL 




WIS 

3SS-7SM 



HOHNER 
HARMONICAS 

For thot specMl gift for 
the music lover yoe know 

pM Standby 
Lancer 

10% OFF 

OFFiR GOOD Wmi THIS COUPON 

. . - f?? f?i[^ JS^iL - - ■ - 



The CENTER for 
Participant Education 




^ Needs Course Instructors^ 
^ for Winter Quarter 1[ 

^ Pick up course syliabus in the ^ 



CPE office 251 Univ. Union 
or cai 644-6577. 



Get 
Involved 



Get 
Motivated 



FtKoign Language <^ 



TEACHERS NEEDED IN: 
Dance Politics 
Auto Mechanics Religion 
Practical Skills Cooking 
^ Art Music 



it 




a / Friday, December r 1978 FLORIDA F' ambfaj? 




ClassiHed Ads 





THE WF§U TV AUCTION 
STARTS TOMMORROVV AT 7 PM 
TUWe Hi AWO MAKg YOUR BIP 

Minolta SRT202 w cat* & Strobe only 
S200 Brand naiv Zebra Kenlio Bike 10 
spMd $150 ^iphone FT3S0 acouttic 
guitar ifka now amy tm Coll now 

224-2170 

USED STEREO EQUIPMENT 
MIAMM:QUAO 303 POWER AMP 
MARANTZ 7 PREoAMP 
AR 5 3 WAY SPEAKERS 
SYSTEM PRICE Um att-TWO 

AM FM stereo set w-tape, cassette & 
turntable brand -new 4 rocords & 2 
cartrMpaa only «ifO SMM Mon & 
Eve. 



Child's Bike, 16" Htfffy, 
condition. $20. 576-0950. 



Special sale at POOR RICHARDS 
Bean Bag chairs reg. $30 now $19.05 
Leotards 12.50, long scarfs $4.50, gold 
Or Silver belts, 15. Between Eckerds & 

PMINpo Eloclroiifc TomfaMo 

Model 212 less cartridge 
$90.00 ($170.00 New) Call 222-3610 or 
2244370 Aifc for AlWI. 



For sale: Eletronphonic turntable, 
AM-FM stereo,8 track. Minor parts 
ropiacement.$45 call 576-6526 6p.m. 

Poverty stricken studont must sail- 
one set of Volvo carburetors Fits maot 
Volvos - SdO calHHi5-230l 



in 



m LOT ON POND 

ry club section,^ 
$15,000 

(emoount H you mtond to buM oolar ) 



FOR SALE: TWO MAORIOAL 
DINNER TICKETS FOR DEC. 8. 
CALL DAVIS AT 644-5744 or 575-1670. 
$0.50 EACH. 



10 speed bike - excellent condition 
ONLY TWO WEEKS OLD 
CALL 22<m46 AFTER 0;0r 

LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN 

on drapes, rugs, curtains, couches, 
dinettes, dresses, beds, desks, books, 
records & lots of other useful 
household items. The Old Fashioned 
General Store 1763 S. AAonroe. 224 1434 
M-F. 12-5:30, Sat 11-5:30, Sun 2-5:30. 



WATERBED SLEEP SYSTEM. 
WOOD FRAME, KING SIZE MAT 
TRESS,SHEETS.JUST $85. Call 386 
0921 

Art, Antiques 8, Collectibles go up for 
bids Saturday at 7 pm at tHa.WFSU - 

TV A' Iff on 6M 4760 




1975 Dodge Tradesman 100 van wood 
panel int. part. Comolete all mat. PS 
air 2950 Call 488 8754 575 9867 Tom 

VW bus for sale, 1906 model with a 
rebuilt 60 motor, runs good, $500. 
224-7745 

1972 PINTO RUNABOUT 

WILL CARRY YOU ANYWHERE 
AC, luggage rack, $695 
1-997-3630, after 5 call 644-5744 



68 TOYOTA FOR SALE $300 
6443957 RUNS WELL. 4000R 
AUTOMATIC CALL EVENttIGS 

POR SALS 72 TOYATA COROLLA 
KXCELLCNT CONDITIONS $1050 

CALL ANY TIME SIB>MI0 

1973 FIAT 128 2 DOORS GOOD 
CONDITION ASK 13000 
PHONE 575-0220 ^ 

■MrfMb— »— — I I II ' I 



71 TR6 GOOD CONDITION, 
ONE OWNER, LOW MILEAGE 
1704737 

67 2-dr coup deVille Cadillac 
excellent cond., orig. mile. 50,000 
Call after 5:00P.M. 575 5051 



TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE 
1975 Vega station wagon in good 
condition new brakes 8. tires. Will not 
explode if hit from rear. $1,000 Call 
Oawn at 644^75 M F 8 to 5. 



72 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 
GOOD CONDITION, AIR, AM-FM 
Call 3064049 or 070-6367 

Porsche 350-B 1962 rebuilt trans. 
877 5873 $3200 What an Xmas present 

for yourself or a friend 



Four Shelby mags and tires 

Four bolt pattern 165.00 

or best offer also Rollbar o ff MO B 

Best offer AAark 2240524 work 3119991 



CLASSIC 1950 MGA 

A fine nr^otor car - $2500 
878 4600 evenings 




KAWASAKI KE175 1977 1400 MILES 
PERFECT CONDITION INCLU- 
DI NG 2 HELMETS $500 575-9733 

NCWIDA 500 F 1972 Yoshmura cam, 
Kerker headers, K8iNs, Lockhart Oil 
Cooler 8i Thermostat, Lester Mags, 
Continental tires, lugfmia radi. 
Better than new. 575-3501 




Responsible female roommate 
needed to share 2br unfurnished apt 
w-same at Mission Ridge Apts. $50. 
deposit, $125. per month which 
inchJdes utilities. Come by Apt 146 or 
call 878-5026. Also roommate needed 
for 2 br trailer in quiet neighborhood 
near Tallahassee sports arena $50 
deposit $90 per month which includes 
utilities. Call 070-5026 

Large 3 bdrm house, unfurn, nice 
yard. Private, 2 biks to c?mpus, $225 
no lease Call 224-5848 anytime. 

Rmt wanted Winter qtr nonsmoker 
2bd apt Landmark ph col 904-252-3488 
Pat 



Large turn, studio apt. $135. month 
includes cable and garbage collection. 
Dunwoody Apartments, 405 Dun- 
woody St. R«s. manager 222-4505, or 
385-9392. Sorry, nopals. 

looking to upgrade your living condi- 
tions? Here's your chance. Quaint 1 
bedroom apt on College Ave. $125- 
month Call Gordon-222-9787 after 6 

2 bedroom house near FSU, 
unfurnished kitchen equipped, fenced 
yard, pets ok $225 mo. 1-997-2905. 
Montecello evenings 

SUBLET STUDIO APT 190 AAO INCL. 

UTIL. CALL 224 6028 

SUBLET OSCEOLA HALL FOR 2 
AAorF POOL, SAUNA, FOOD, PAR- 
TIES CALL ANYTIME 222-6659. 

SUBLEASE STUDIO APT 190mo 
incls.utlls. Walking distance from 
FSU Call 224-6028 Call now and get a 
special discount 

SUBLET STUDIO APT $145 MO. LOW 

UTIL 1 BLK FR COL. OF BUS. VERY 

C '5 

FM RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM APT 
w-3 OTHER GIRLS $61-i-\4 UTL 
NEAR FSU CALL 576-5904 

APT. FOR RENT - Lg 1 BR $165-mo. 
Cable TV-AC, very close to campus 
turn. Avail. Dec. Call 224-1009. 

TAKE OVER CONTRACT AT CASH 
HALL. SAVE $50. ALL MEALS, 
MAID, POOL. CALL 222-1931. 

ROOAAAAATE WANTED: FEAAALE 
GRAD STUDENT TO SHARE 2 BR 
FURN DUPL.$75-MO-l-V1iUTIL, 
AVAIL, mo DEC> 224-3090 

1 bdrm furnished apt. walk to FSU 
Quiet and private-$175 includes all 
utilities. 2344W04 

Sublet 2 br. apt. starting Jan. 1 - June. 
205 - month. Includes water, sewer & 
cable. Fully carpeted, central heat 6, 
air, dishwasher, disposal, pool. Low 
utilities. Call 575-6609. Susan or Ellen. 

Sublet one bedroom furnished 
aoartment Jan. 1 1979 in Tallahassee 
Village 2241 w. Pensa4»la. Come by 
apt. 14 after noon. 

HELP! Sublet my gigantic 1 br apt. 
Take over lease Dec. 5 until June. 
Gold carpet, dishwashat*- disposal, 
central air-heat: Pool, sauna 8i 
laumlry room. Walking distance to 
FSU. Utils. average $20. Unfurnished 
Call 575-7635 or 644-4075 Gregg 

duplex, 2br, Ibath, livingroom, 
diningroom, kitchen. Near Ramada 
on W. Tenn. $105 Call 

3856963 



Large 1 bdrm. fum. 3 biks. from FSU 
$155 incl. cable TV and garbage 
collection. Sorry no pets. Call rasl0ont 
mgr . 222 4505 

Beautiful lg. 1 bdrm. apt. Tennis. 
RacquettMtl, Sauna; tmfum. ISO-nto. 

Call 575 2493 after 5 ask for Bob 

SUBLET 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED 
APT. IN PLAZA FOR WINTER 
QUARTER. CALL 222-2752. 



WALK TO SCHOOL SUBLET ONE 
BEDROOM APT. FURN. FIRST 
FLOO R POOL SIDE AAARK 2248524 
WORK 30S9901 

Lrg 1 bdr fum apt at Regency Park 3 
biks from FSU. Pool, tennis cts, cabia 
incl. 195 mo 222-7900 (F16) 

Takeover contract at Osceola Hall all 
meals maid service pool sauna TV for 
more info call Wendy 2243215 

SUBLET: PRINCE AAANOR APTS. 
2 bdrm, unfurn, pool, laundry, walk to 
FSU. Call 575 3056. 

Sublet 2 bdr apt walk to campus and 
Pubiix $255. mo. avail Ooc. call 

576-9996. 

OSCEOLA HALL CONTRACT 

19 MEALS SAUNA POOL SUBLET 

CALL JOHN 222 6671 

OSCEOLA HALL CONTRACT 

19 MEALS MAID SERVICE POOL 
SUBLET CALL ROBBIE 2226671 

NICE 3 BDRM HOUSE UNFURN. 
BIG BACK YARD AVAIL DEC 150190 
CALL 5750545 AFTER 5. 

1 bdrm fum apt easy walk to Publix 
and stadium brand new building must 
see to apfMrociato avoH immotf 
644-6906 




Rm mate needed Jan 1st with 2 brad 
students 3bdrm 2bath 75.00 mo. +1-3 
utilities. 85.00 deposit Call AAOtt 
386-7869anytime Hartsfield Rd. 

FM RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM APT 
W-3 OTHER GIRLS $61-hV4 UL7 
NEAR FSU CALL 570-5904 

FEM RMMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM 
APT. V2RT i. UTIL REGENCY PX 
APTS AVAIL. DEC15 224-9113 

TALENT NIGHT AT JJ ZACKARY'S 

$50 $20-$10 PRIZES 
Anyone int«-ested must audition Wed. 
24pm W. Tenn. St. 



AAale roommate needed to share apt. 
for winter quarter-Plaza Apts-walk to 
campus $90-f '/^expenses Call 222-2648 

I WOULD LIKE TO PURCHASE A 
TICKET TO THE RUSSIAN BALLET 

FSU BOX NO. U 6419 

$$$$$$$$$$$ $ $ $ $$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ 

CASH FOR GOLD RINGS, COINS 

MOST CLASS RINGS $10-030 
WEDDING BANDS $7-$20 
ALL OTHER GOLD RINGS 
SILVER DOLLARS $4 UP 
224-0767,PHII.iP LEAVE PH.No. 

AAature independent female to share 
nruxtern 3 bdrm 2 bath house. No pot 
but otherwise liberal. 306-4745 
evenings. $105 pays all expenses. 

Unquestionably the ultimate in 
student housing! Spacious, conven 
lent Ibr 90. block from campus on 
College Ave. $135-month available 
immediately or sooner Call 222-9707 or 
644.SSQS and ask for Sid 

Female to share 2brm apt IV2 miles 
from campus. Non-smkr preferred. 
222-4517 90 per mo -I- V*t electric. 

Roomate needed,3bdrm house,cent. 
heat-air,$77-i-l 3util.Grad or mature 
undergrad prefer red. 224 5848 

Two female roomates needed own 
room spacious apt. Berkshirt AAafwr 
$113 mo. 1-3util. 576-5851 for winter 

Fm rmmtbeg wtrqrt Ibdrm Iblockto 
FSU 77.50 -t- >/i Utilts. call 224-2513 
nights. 

Male Rmt Needed for 2 bdrm fum apt. 
W8iS qtr. 2 pools sauna tennis & 
racquetball crt own rm 81 bth 110 -i- 
dep 8. V3 util 81 ph. Call 575-7136 Oonny 
Location 1 mile from campus 

FM RMMT LONGLEAF APT 

$63.75-l-V4UTIL 

CALL 576-1540 

$50 per 100 envelopes stuffed and 
addressed at home. Write Benco 
Enterprises Box 5239 Austin Tx 78763. 

Need immediately! Female roomate 
to share 2bdrm apt can have own 
room $00 mo and 1-3util walk to 
FSU224-0397 v 



PICKERS WANTED. JAM WITH 
TALLAHASSEE'S BEST. EVERY 
FRI EVE THE PICKIN PARLOR 

Roommate wanted for large 2-bed- 
rm apt. 10 min walk from Unio n $10 
per mo plus v? util Call Owen 224-39n 

AAALE ROOAAMATE NEEDED FOR 
WINTER IBR. 06 + ViULJ. CALL 
AHOY 214iaW I BLOCK fWU 

PENNA 

Need ride to PA. for Christmas break 
after Dec 14 will share driving, 
expenses Call John 214 10 00 kaap 

trying 

ROOAAMATE 2-BEOROOM APT 
6L0SE TO FSU Vi RENT+UTIL 

AAOVE IN DEC OR WTV4 5752234 

FEM RMMT W QUARTER OWN RM 
3BDR HOME $62MO-t- 1-3UTIL. 
YARD FURNISHED 576-0739 CLOSE 

PERSON TO SUBLET 2 BDRM 
FURN APT OVER-LOOKING POOL 
AT PLAZA APTS. PLEASE CON- 
TACT Ronni or George 222-1359 

50 CU. FT. SCUBA TWIN TANKS 
WITH BACK PACK CALL PATTY 
WK. 877-9033 HM. 222-1966 

MOTOR DRIVE FOR CANON F 1 IN 
GOOD CONDITION PAY CASH 
CALL 2248045 OR 040-9SIS ASK FOR 
JONATHAN 

M Grad student seeks responsible 
rmmt, Mor F. $112-f Vjutll. Need own 
bdrm turn. 6 miles north 



M or FM rmt needed to share 2 bdrm 
apt as of Jan 1 own room $100 + 1-3 
util Spanish Town Apts 5752151 

ROOAAAAATE 2-BEDROOM APT 
CLOSE TO FSU Vi RENT + UTIL 
AAOVE IN DEC OR WT\0 8732234 

Fm rmt wanted in Plaza Apt. Two 
great nonsmoking grad students 91 
monthly & 1-3 utilltias. Call 234-0271 
Yvonne 

Wanted person to share Seminole 
Apt. for wtr qtr Vzexpenses-^utility 
call Dave 222-5960 736 W. Va. St. 

behind KA 




needed. 
12 



Waitress & kitchen help 
Apply in person this Sun. 
and 2 at 210 S. Adams 



FRE(E ROOM, BOARD, SMALL 
SALARY in exchange for infant care. 
Must be experienced, non-smoker. 
Flexible schedule, but must have at 
least ttiree weekdays free. Car 
required. Call 385-7402. 

Extra hours earn you $500. per 1000 
"stuffing envelopes with our circulars. 

^^I irJL° J^*''*® Enterprise Dept. 
105 PO Box 1150 AAkidieliMMR, ^io 
45042 



Leon County Food Co-op is accepting 
resumes for the position of coordina- 
tor. Applications accepted Nov. 28 to 
Dec. 12. Those with the five highest 
ratings will be contacted for an 
interview to take place on Dec. 17. A 
decision will be reached by the 18th. 
Salaried position based on 30 hours 
per week; health insurance, aiKj 2 
weeks paid vacation. Additional info 
may be obtained at LCFC storefront. 

$50 per 100 envelopes stuffed and 
addressed at home. Write Benco 
Enterprises Box 5239 Austin Tx 78763. 

PART TIME EVENINGS. 6-9p.m. 
3 nights. Car necessary. CaH 214-2510. 

2-4p.m. Mon-Fri. 

ovs:rseas JOBS — Summar-fuli 
time. Europe, S. America, Australia, 

Asia, etc. All fields, $500 1200 
monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. 
Free info — Write: International Job 
Center, Box 4490-FB Berkeley, CA 
94704. 




house PAINTING 
WALLCOVERING 
PRESSURE WASHING 

experienced & raasonabia 
Call Jeff 224-774S lor astlmata 

Fast accurate typist-IBM correcting 
setec.-fiapers, dissert., nua. Linda 
Durbin 576-1900 



Typing- IBM Selec. correcting, 
editing, near campus. 575-7171 



TYPING! ExptriefKed legal secre- 
tary Dissertatkm. term papers, legal 
papers, etc. Corr. typawwlfsr. Notary 
Sharon 878 2294 

I STRING TENNIS RACQUETS 
One day service. Lowest prices In 
town. Call Bill at 576 0286 

Keep in tune 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNING 
RESTORATION, MOVINGS. 
ESTIMATI^ 




Let POOR RICHARD'S hem your 
pants or jeans for only $1.50 (wash 
and dry 1st + bring the shoes you plan 
to wear w-them) next to Pubiix in 
WeshMOod Shopping Cenfor 570-2100 
Open 7 days a week. 



IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! 
SeiKl $1.00 for your 256-page, man 
order catalog of Collegiate Research. 
10,250 topics listed. Prompt Delivery. 
Box 25907 B, LOS Angaias, Calif. 90025 
(213) 477-0226. 

SUNNY DAY NURSERY SCHOOL 
Near FSU. Certified Teactiers. 
Hours 7:30-5:30. Call mMU 

APPLIANCE REPAIR 
Service on all major appliances, air 
conditioning and heating. Sales- 
recofKfitloned units with 90 day 
warranty. Call Marshall, days 
599-7879 (pocket beeper) 
Evening 070-S020. LICENSED 

I DO CHAIR WEAVtNO AND 
CANING. Good references, reason- 
able rates. Call Rhonda around 0 
evenings. 2244012. 




Complete Hairstyling-Wash, cond> 
tion, cut 8i blow dry Acid 
balance perms Henna's 
nautral or color * slwrt hair or 
for long hair. All work by 
students urKler supervision of quali- 
fied instructors. Tall. College of 
Barber Styling. 1221 Appalachee 
Pkwy. Call 877-3020 for appt. Closed 
Mondays. 

EVERYBODY'S DOING IT. 

Looking good and saving money at 
JO'S FOR HAIR 222-1112 HOI N. 
AAonroe 

FSU SPECTRUM IS FILLING 
SPOTS FOR WINTER QUARTER. 
ANY BAND THAT PLAYS ANY 
ORIGINAL TUNES NOW IS YOUR 
CHANCE TO GET ON TELEVISION 
FSU SPECTRUM CALL222S503 ASK 
FOR ISAAC ASST PRODUCER 

JD's FOR HAIR 

the difficult we do immediatly, the 
impossible takes a little longer. We're 
the ones to see if you've got problem 
hair. Call us today. 222-1112 
1020 N. AAonroe 



EXPERIENCED TYPIST 
Term papers, disscrtattons, ttteses 
Ph 575-3495 Oom-Spm. After 5-0774900 



hSh^!'^' pregnancy j^rt^ 

control or tieaitti ntn ^ 
^••"fciW Wamen's Heaim cemS! ** 

224-98C 0 

CANpB RENTALS o^wIk^IilTRi^ 
A US 90 Full dP,v 8. dey 2 
dr.nks & bee^ i>\abi! qH 
everyday except AAon. 9254412 

Experienced typist requires f\ntntiM 
assistance via typing in my homT]? 
types of typing, including fhrnZZ, 
sciwjtific papers. Price neg^pjj 
3051053 anytime. 3851392 days 

GO-GETTERS 

THANK YOU 
SOOO HAPPY 



Typing — all sorts — 
correcting typewriter — transcripts 
of tapes. Reliable. Call 576-5915 9 to 5. 

Need a nifty slarater for a gator or 
some ottier scum? For only six bucks 
the Cash Hall insult team will be glad 
to personalize some ttatred for you. 
All you naad is a tape playar. 

Tired of being affluent, longing at 

experience the poverty most of us live 
in? I will be glad to relieve you of any 
excess cash. Keep 
Flambeau Classifieds. 

Typing: experienced professional 
secretary with IBM self correcting 
typewriter 75c to 1.00 per page Call 
386-6524. Special ra^*^^ =,x/;.M,hip 

GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY! 

Earn nrKXiey, improve health. Discov- 
er Shaklee! meetings 1 and 4 p.m. 
Dec. 2 Luthar House 1004 W. 
Pensacota 



BASS LESSONS 

Jazz and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEmV 



your 
days 



APPLIANCES 

Wilt buy and-or haul off 
appliances. Call Marshall 
599-7879 (pocket 
170-5026 LICENSED 



COLLEGIATE STUD MODELS 
Wanted for Playgirl type photos. 
Photos made in your area. Write: 
Photo NO.560, 256 S. Robertson Blvd., 
Beverly Hills, Ca. 90211. 



FOR MAK NG MC 
LOVE PETE 



sieepkig late when you can tx <« 

Hillel's Bagel i Lex Brunch SoncJ! 
Dec. 3 at 11 30d m in the ScmiMu! 
Bidg Statier Room? For mart 12 
call Hillei at 222-5454 ^ 

Dr. 70BX295 

We hear that on the W ntpr stUsiit* 
you lose all self-respect ana ^ertSm 
any manner of bizarre and irnrnimii 
ocls. Is Riis true? 

Interested S p e cH ia i 

NEED INFORAAATION 
Anyone witnessing or having mt 
information conc e rn i ng the iraniai 
denr>ostration of Nov 15 please com« 
to room 346 of the union Wed. Dec | 
between 10a.m. and to-m. 
ED HARVEY 
OWica Of the Public Defender 

Hey GDL hope 21 isnt too old to whip it 
up tonite-20 yr olds are still young and 
energetic! Happy Birthday Lom 
Shortestshit 

BLUE EYES 

"You've got something I want How 
about this weekend sontetime? Yog 
know where you con roodi me. 
A Lady Friend. 

VICKIE L., HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO 
OUR FAVORITE AAASHER! THIRD 
FLR. CONRADI PREP RM . 

Kathy Lynn- I'll fry to keep my 
chickens off your a ww i ng mecMM. 

Guess who. 

KILLER R.A. 

HAPPY N-DAYi WE LOVE YOU. 
LOVE, PHRED & KALUHA 

Due to the large volume of replies 
received I will not be able k> ansvMr 
all letters- but ttiank you for writine- 
ifs been a lao ming SMporitMS. 

Amanda. 

P.S. you can write my friend 
Eimodine at ttie sanrte address. 

amanda you have other girlfrienOi 
too, why not share a little? Alicia 

TO WEINER I LOVE YOU ON 
YOU R Z I . I WANT TO BE WITH YOU 
FOREVER. 

LOVE 

POOBEAR 

Happy first d ay Of Dacember! 

TO MY SWEETIE. .. 
HAPPY 18th IN YOUR GENERAL 
DIRECTION.... I LOVE YOU, 
YOUR MILK SUCKER 

TO BAM BAM FROM LITTLE BEN 
YOUR A SPECIAL PART OF ME 
PLEASE FORGET THAT NIGHT 

TODAY'S TRADING POST TREAT 
FREE medium beverage with a p<k» 
special sandwhich for $1.97. Come on 
by and try us for lunch. 

TUNA GRINDER AND DRAFT OR 
SOOA $1 JO at THE PUB U12 W. 
Tann. St. llam-lpm FRi. 

Howard Johnson's Restaurant Rum 
Keg Lounge Budweiser draft 50c 
5 7p.m. Mon.-Sat. 



FRIDAY AFTERNOON SPECIAL - 
MICHELOB beer 25 cents a glass At 
THE PUB 3-7 pjn. 1312 W. Tennessee 

St 

WE TAKE THE TIME TO DO 'T 

RIGHT. Headquarters 'I'"" J 
perms and great haircuts JJMJWU*^ 
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Basketball 



from page 21 



game* 

The tetns traded fmckets after the time out. with FSU 
barely retaifli^K a iw pont lead uitil WiHans called Ik 
the S cgya olea to go into their "temfw oontroi'* offeiiie. a 
move WIffiaflH i«d propekd FSU into a niiie poiat lead 
and control of the game. 

"We went into the tempo oontroi and polled tbem away . 
from the basket, focdng them to fool/* WUKams said. *'I 
think wescoredsixootof eight tbnies down the floor in the 
tempo control offense, and tliatis when we took complete 
a)ntrol of the game.'* 

Leading by only four at 58-S4, FSU got a free throw from 
Tony Jackson, baskets from Hank Mann and Murray 
Brown and two free throws from Ed Chatman to go up by 
nine at 64-vS5. 

Although the Seminoles struggled to get good shots 
early and turned the ball over often, Williams didn't feel it 
was because of the Hilltoppers' deliberate play. 

i don't think their deliberate play really disturbed us/* 
Williams said. **We just made mistakes.** 

Williams was complimentary about the play of his team, 
especially on defense, and gave special praise to Ed 
Chatman, the 6-3 forward. 

"We had Chatman on their best scorer," Williams said, 
*'and he really cnt him off in the second half/* 

Wiffiams also said the TuUy Gym crof^d wms fantastic, 
even better than he rememb^ed when ooadiing at 
Jacksonville, nd he thooght they responded very well 
when the Seflunoles slowed down Ihe pace late in the game 
with their tea^o control offense. 

The ScB M noie s travel to Aabnm for a game Dec. 4 and 
then to Jadaon vMc to play die Flofida Gators on Dec. 9. 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU i-r.u^y. December 1, 1978 / 23 





Hank Mann 

, . .caifed far charging m fM night's action 



Sports In Brief 



The Lady Seminole basketball team, now 2-2 after a win 
over Stetson Wednesday, will host South Flori^ at Tully 
Gym Saturday at 5 p.m. 

« * « 

The Tallahassee Rugby Club will face the Florida State 
Rugby Oob Saturday on the IM fields. 



Field 1 
Field 2 
Fidd3 

Field 1 
Field 2 
Field 3 

Field 1 
Field2 
Fiehia 



4:00 

Bomb Squad vs. Low Profiles 
DeGraffites vs. NJAC 
F-^roop vs. Unstrung Heroes 
5:06 

Long Branch Crew vs. Kappa Alpha Psi 
Luc|e Dudes vs. Ropers Wonders 
S^zones vs. Hub City Honchos 
6:00 

Unnecessary Roo^mess vs. D&I Sports 
Sailors vs. Bonlfiglio Bros 
Phi Delto Theta vs. Lambda Chi Alpha 



COmES BACH! 

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FSU 

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Ask others tt>en call 877-0010. 



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Tallahassee. 32304 



Found gold timex wafcli In front af 
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RMMid: at FSU-Gvi lle ga me gold ring 
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M / Dooember 1, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Rattlers' play-off hopes hinge on 
outcome of Orange Blossom Classic 



by gerald ensley 

flamb€du sports writer 

By late Saturday night the FAMU Rattlers will know one 
way or the other. 

Saturday night in the Orange Bowl, the Florida A&M 
Rattlers play the Grambling State Tigers in the 45th 
Orange Blossom Classic. Besides pitting the top two black 
college teams in the nation, the game carries the added 
significance for the Rattlers of deciding their post-season 
fate. A win over the presently undefeated Tigers will give 
the Rattlers a berth in the NCAA Division 1-A playoffs. 

FAMU head cotch Rudy Hubbard, though enthused 
over this match-up of football powerhouses, is 
disappotnted that his team's playoff chances hinge upmi 
this game. 

*it's unfair that this game should even matter/* 
Hubbard said. We*ve already got the best record (of die 
teams being considered).** 

Eastter in the week, NCAA officials indicated tiiat 
South Carolina State, 8-2-1, and Westeni Kentucky. 8-2, 
were in contention with FAMU. 9-1. for the single 
remaining 1-A playoff spot. 

'*! don*t know what their reasoning is^** Hubbard said of 
the NCAA. **I Oitidt we should akeady have an invitaticm.** 

Hubbard, as is his habit, is not worrying about the 
NCAA as much, however, as he is Grambling. Speaking of 
Grambling, which has split four previous OBC*s with 
FAMU, Hubbard says he expects an exciting game. 

"It'll be a very physical game. They're big and-fast, and 
run a lot of mis-direction plays," Hubbard noted. '*1 just 
hope our players don't get lost trying to follow the ball." 

Grambling, 9-0-1 with the tie against Mississippi Valley, 
also concerns Hubbard's defensive coach Fred Goldsmith. 

"We're worried most about their size, and the skill 
of some of those big guys," Goldsmith claimed. "They've 
hurt everyone this year with their passing, although they 
run a fairly balanced attack. We have worked a little bit 
harder this week on our pass defense to get ready for 
them." 

Despite a little trouble the last few weeks in the first 
half. FAMU's defense still ranks number one against the 
run and in total defense in Division 1-A. 

"The most impressive thing about Grambling," 
Goldsmith noted, "is that all their players execute well. 
On their play-action passes, everyone carries out their 
fakes perfectly. That, of course, says something for Eddie 




An open and shut case iu 
heating your home with wix 



Albert Chester 

. . .has chance to be drafted by the pros 

Robinson (Grambling's legendary coach). He's been using 
the same system for four years, and it keeps working." 

Hubbard feels at least five of his seniors stand good 
chances of being drafted by the pros. Rattlers Chris 
Douglas. Warren Sadler, Cliff Price. Sheldon Hodge, and 
Albert Chester will be closing out their college careers 
Saturday night, and could all be pro material. 

Albert Chester, in particular, has won praise from 
Hubbard all year. 

"We always knew Albert had exceptional skills," 
Hubbard said. "But this year he has matured 
considerably, and done the things we always felt him 
capable of. I think he can become a pro quarterback 
without too much trouble." 






Considering the cost of oi', g"^ and electric he at 
these days, it's easy to sec wfcq^ hundreds of thousands 
of nomeowaefs across Nririii Amerioi have turned to 
wood heating. 

It's moce economical (it can trim 
507c or more off your "leatiiig bill). , 
Wbod smtlls and sounds as Qood as " • 
it bums. And it's one form of energy fc^.f lt/ ^ ''' 
that's still growing. 

But what do you bum wood 
in to get the most heat am. of it? 
>\%*d lUce to suggest a Fisher 
Stove . 

The Fisher's unique two-step combustion chamber 
recirculates wood gases back into the flames, resulting m 
more heat and fewer ashes. Its patented spin tlratt contn 
and virtually airtight construction mean you can reyuLiic 
how much heat it puts out. And because it's made Irom 
carefully welded, heavy plate steel, it will give you years 
of remarkable hcudng efficiency. 

have a variety of Fisher Stove models to ch<x)se from 
So come in soon aad find out what makes a Fisher a Fisher 

Case closed. 



TMnn tt CoMtiy 

Garden Center 
833W.TharpaSt. 
tall., Fla. 32303 



Ols 




n idea America is warming up to. 



FSU SCHOOL 
OF MUSIC 

presents 

THE UNWERSITY SYMPHONY 
ORCHESTRA 

PHn^LIP SPURGEON, Conductor 
DEBORAH EGEKVIST, Flute 

music fry 

ft. 

SIBELIUS/ CARL NIELSEN/ 
DVORAK (Symphony No. 8) 

MONDA Y EVENING, DECEMBER 4, 
1978 ■ 8:15 P.M. RUBY DL4MOND 

AUDITORIUM 

Tickets available now at the Central Ticket Office 
in the University Union Building and will be 
available at the Ruby Diamond Box Office the 
evening of the pierformance orrfy. 

FSU STUDENTS: Free with walktatBd ID 
ADULTS: $3.50/NON FSU STUDENTS AND 
SENIOR CITIZENS: $1.75 



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12 



Florida 



Momby 

December 4, 1978 




lights go out, protests go on 
against shah's regime in Iran 



by sylvana foa 



TEHRAN, Iran — Imperial troops opened 
fire with machine guns and rifles last night 
to break up groups of anit-shah protestors 
who defied curfew regulations and 
demonstrated for the third consecutive 
night in the darkened streets of Tehran. 

A government communique said the 
troops "warned the demonstrators, fired 
tear gas and shot into the air but when 
stoned, started to defend themselves." 

Throughout yesterday, bands of defiant 
youths, incited by mullahs opposed to the 
shah, rampaged through the streets and 
bazaars screaming, "Down with the shah!" 
and "We want an Islamic nation!" 

Witnesses in southern, eastern and parts 
of northern Tehran said firing was less 
intense than on Friday and Saturday, but 
added that "many" people had been 
wounded in yesterday's confrontations. 

The state fadio said five people were 
killed and more than 20 wounded Saturday 
night and another seven died Friday night. 
A baa on outdoor nuivement made an 
accurate casualty count for yesterday's 
clashes all but impossible. 

A power Madtoilt, believed to be ^le 
result of a str&e by electrical woriters, 
phiuged mudi of Tehrta into dftrkness. 

MeanwUle, sources close to the royal 
palace said the embattled 2Shah MftenoMd 
Reza Pahlevi has intensified cootacU with 
an key political elements in the country to 
findasolu^totli^MIMi. ' 

But official spokespcfsons st tibc palace 
strongly denied suggestions last night that 
the ahah hadfonned or was in the process 
of forming a regency council to succeed 
himself. 

Ardeshir Zahed, the shah's fMmer 
brother in law and Iranian ambassador in 
Washington, was in Tehran holding toUts 
with the shah. Officials said the discusisoiis 
were routine consultations. 

Speculalm tl»t a regency council was 
being formed become rife as the shah held 
talks — lasting up to three hours at a time 
— witii opposHioii leadm and neutral 
political elements in the afteimalh ci 
yesterday's heavy shooting. 

The shah, 59, who has ruled Iran for 38 
years, omnot hand owar power to his 18 
year old MM and crown ptinoe until 1981. 
But he can entmst hia tlitooe to a regency 
cQonca. even tempomfly, onty the crown 
of age. 



comment on the speculation, said, "There's 
no truth whatsoever in fhose reports." 

The shah's talks with the opposition were 
kept secret reportedly at the insistence of 
the opposition, which thought it might be 
accused of a "sellout," political sources 



said. 

In Paris, exiled Moslem religious leader 
Avatollafi Khomeini called on members of 
the Iranian army to desert, saying it was 
their "religious obligation not to serve the 
oppressors." 



Bio-filtration may save us 
from lake Jackson Mail' 



But the palace spokesperson asked to 



by jim cox 

fi9mbeau staff writer 
Fishing on the southern 
edge- of Lake Jackson 
hasn't been as good as it 
once was. At least that is 
what Red Harrisson, who 
has fished the lake four 
miles north of Tallahassee 
faithfully for the last 15 
years, will tell you. 

Harrisson will tell you 
further that the reason for 
the decline in good fishing 
is "all the damned 
civilization," as he puts 
it, encroaching on the 
lake's southern shore. 

A new type of water 
purifici^ion system, how- 
ever, never before used 
on a lake the siaee oi Lake 
Jackson, may not oofy 
answer Harrisson' s com- 
plaint of un-tested lures, 
but also abate FSU water 
spedalisls' fuming over 
the quality of water in Ibfi 
Uke's soudiem r^kms. 

The system, known as 
a bio-filtrallmi system, is 
u^ue becanse it nse» 
natnnii vegetation to 
cleanse or filter pofintod 
waters rich hi nutrients 
before these waleii reach 
the larger lake body. 

**Blo-fiitimtioahn8 been 
popular for alMt five 
years now." said FSO 
oceanography student 
Christian Byrne, ^ "and 
compared to o<^cr net* 
turn to JMCnSO/K 
page 11 



•'31 



Megjnnis 
on southem Lake JadcMm 



FSU will ask 
Regents to snuff 
delinquent debts 



FSU wlB aik the Bemd of 
If It can forget itent nenriy M,000 In 
ui^MddblBs. 

At Hs reguhv aaoalMy nieethig at tlw 
University ef Sontfi WlaMk hi Tmnpn. the 
BOB wffl wtekome oflkliPy new member 
DuBoee Ausley of Taliahaitf r to the fold 
and consider wheOmr FMda Technofogkal 
Umverslty in OrltBdo can dumge Its name. 

Austey, a Tdfadiasaeean whom Onv. 
Reubin Askew appointed to fiB the vacancy 
of Attorney Genml-elect Jim Smitti, wffl 
attend his first Board meetlngas an official 
member. 

The $79,338 FSU wffl ask to have written 
(rff has been deemed uncollectible after the 
efforts of collection agencies has proved 
futile. Exactly $10,124 of the money comes 
from unpaid university short-term loans, 
$17,578 of the money is in returned checks, 
and $44.64 is from the FSU Media Center. 

Florida Atlantic University will ask to 
write off $26,693 in uncollectible bills. 

President Trevor Coiboum of Florida 
Tech will ask the BOR to approve changing 
the name of this school to the University of 
Central Florida. 

In the proposal Colbourn will submit to 
the Board today, he says the university, in 
its ten-year history, has never been a 
technological university. Colbourn said 85 
percent of FTU students are enrolled in 
non-technological courses. 

Colbourn said the university's present 
name has created significant problems for 
students in non-technological fields seeking 
employment. In addition, he said, the name 
creates problems for university faculty and 
administrators, and discourages potential 
students and faculty from applying because 
they believe the school has a strong 
technological background. 

The change, Coiboum contends in the 
proposal, has the support of the university's 
alumni council and the university 
foundation's board of directors. 

Money collected from university feds will 
be $3 million less than expected this year 
due to lower-than-predicted enrollments 
last June when the SUS budget was drawn 
up by the Florida legislatufe. 

The legislative appropriatloo for the 
educational and general budget of the SUS 
comes from two sources: general revenue 
(state taxes), and incidental trust funds 
(student matriculatioa foes, ont-iif-state 
fees, overhead from contracts and gmnis, 
and other university collected money.) 

Projected Inddental reve»KS for 
fiscal year, based on u^veraity esthnates, 
are going to foB dwrt by one peieeirt of tfte^ 
total E&G budget 

In order for the mri¥€i%lties to spend thehr 
total appropriation for educatfonal and 
general purposes, they must collect all of 
tiielr bttdgeted hicidMrtal wvenm, wMdi 
for Oris year is ^6 mlBlon. 

FSU's share of the deficit Is piojecteil «t 
$567,547. . 

A siriMsoHHilttee of ttie InMvfaMttlntfonnl 
planning, proj 



1. 



2 / Momtey, DeoofulMr 4, 1978 R.ORIDA FLAMBEAU 



1 



1^ 



Ml 



#1- 



Winter ElectioM 



Winter Elections are right around the corner. Filing for candidacy will begin jan 8 
at 5 p.m. upon return to campus after the break. Filing will last one week and forms 
will be made available in Room 321 Unidn. The offices to be fiNed are as follows 

1. ) President and Vice-President of Student Body (Candidates nmtt file in pairs 

2. ) Cbief Justice and Foiir (4) Associate Justices of the Supreme Court (Chif t 
Justices nMist be law students <M at feast funior sending. Associate lust ice 
candidates must be of at least second quarter ifreshman \jndergraduate standing ) 

3. ) Four (4) Union Board Members. 

All candidates for office shall be required to have and maintain an over all 2 o 
scholastic average No student shall hold two major offices of Student Governmem 
concurrently. (Dormitory offfces are not Student Government offices ) 

The primary election will be Jan 31 with the run-off election on Feb 7 Here is 
your opportunity to get involved at Florida State — either as a candidate, a party 
supporter, a poll worker or a voter. Don't be apathetic! Get involved! 



We Want your John Honcodi 



Student 
Government 



Pagei 



* 7..' .. •M --"^*y^7j'MfH 



Honda Student Astociotioii 



Petitions will be circulated in classes and a big push outside during registration 
pick-up. Be ready, we wanna '"getcha!" FPIRG will be unleashing some big 
surprises, so watdi for them. 

SIGN - SIGN - SIGN 



Christian Fellowship 



Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will have a praise and worship service Fndav, 
Dec 7, at the United Ministries Center at 7 30 p.m. The UMC is across the street 
from the School of Music at the corner of Park and Copeland. Everyone is invited. 



Forum on Iran 



■01 



ill 

I 



At present, the Fk>rida Student Association is working in conjunction with the 
Student Governnient Association and the FSU's Women's Center to provide low cost 
day care for your children. Questionnaires dealing with the .issue have been 
circulated around caihfMJS both ^ tables and in The Flambeau. To date, the lack of 
response has been appalling. Another attempt is now being made to get the vital 
it^onnation needed to provide this service to you. Please make it a point to fill out 
one of these forms and return it to one of the locations cited on the form. 

Also, remember that the FkMrida Student Association is here to help you. In 
essence, it ts your voice in the legislature. Lack (rf interest in this area can only be 
d^imental to yourself and to your education. At present^ we are seeking bright, 
motivated and dedicated students to work with us on various issues. 

For furthier information, please call Donna E. Albert, f SA Annex Director, at 
644-iai1, or at home, 222-5503. 

This is your opportunity to have your voice heard. 



T— ^i.— J^-i-A — I AA^^ISAmAL 
raRKWRMnm mMHini 



The Transcendental Meditation program will hold an introductory lecture and 
review of research on Tuesday, Dec. 5 at 8 p.m. in room 240 Union. It will be 
sponsored by the Students International Meditation Society, and admission is free. 



S.O. Board 



There will be a meeting of the S.O. Board on Thursday, Oec. 7 , at 4:30 p.m. in 
Room 320 Union. The purpose of this meeting will be to review ail the budget 
allocations made during the budget hearings and make final authorizations on all 
budget requests for Winter Quarter. 



Pro-Dental Studonts 



Tuesday, Dec. b, the FSU Pre-Health Professions Office will hold an open house 
for all pre-dental students in Room 34 Montgomery Gym at 7 p.m. Dr. Berringer, 
Associate Director of student affairs, will be on hand to explain the function and 
services provided by the new office as it pertains to pre-dental students. 



Scuba Club 



FSU Scuba Club will hold a meeting Tuesday Dec 5 at 5 p m in Room 246 Union 
All persons interested in diving the Florida Kevs over Christmas break MUST attend 
this meeting. If you are planning to travel to the Keys and cannot attend this meeting 
contact Tom Dudley at 575-6701 before Wednesday. Dec. 6. 



Tuesday at 7:30 
A PANEL DISCUSSION 
ON IRAN 

Sponsored by: The Vice-President for Student Affairs, Campus Ministries 

Association, and the Student Government. 
Panelists: Dr. Marjorie Mowlem — Government, Dr. Leo Sandon — Religion, Abdul 

Ali Bigdeli — ISA, Ron Greer — Education and former military. 
Moderator: Rjev. Jack Ahlers 

Respondents: S C., I.F.C., I.R.H.C.) Scholarship Houses, Women's Center, and 
hillel 

GET INVOLVED - GET EDUCATED EVERYONE IS INVITED!!! 



Free Film 



India Association and the International Student Association are co-sponsoring the 
show of BHUVAN SHOME, a beautiful movie (with English sub-titles) on a theme of 
human sensitivity, directed by Mrinal Sen, a leading director of the decade from 
India who "put the art' film firmly on the commercial map." All are welcomed Two 
documentaries on Ravi Shankar (the sitarist) and drums of India will also be shown. 
TIME Dec. 2, at 2 p.m. 

PLACE; Carravyay Auditorium (Geology Building 120, FSU) 





Smoking is harmful 
to your baby 's health. 
Quit for both of you. 
For help call your 
American Carxxr Society. 



S C AOVFRTISFMFNT 



ni)fMIA FLAMOEAU Monday December 4 t97S / 9 





Study hard, we'll be heme 
very seen! Geod hick 
with finds, enpiy the 

cenung holidoy • 



The Government Students Association is sponsoring a discussion led by Dr. 
Marjorie Mowlam of theCovemment Department titled "Women as Professors and 
Student in Political Science." It will be held Wednesday, Dec. 6 in Room 240 Union 
at 115 p.m. Everyone is urged to attend and participate in this lively discussion. . 

The Model U.S. Senate team will be holding its final meeting of the fall quarter 
Thursday, Dec. 7 at 4 p. m in Room 64 Bellamy All interested parties need to attend. 

Anyone interested in participating in the Model United Nations at Harvard 
University in February should contact David Ream in Room 558 Bellamy or cail 
644-4418. 



Anyone wishing to be on the Health Cefiter Advisory Committee should call Dr. 

Leach at 644-5590. 



Phi Bstfl i ffT>^f f f f 



Phi Beta Lambda, a co-curriculum business organization, is conducting a 
workshop on parliamentary procedure in Business Room 224 on Tuesday, at 7:30 
p.m. Anyone interested please attend. Come sharpen up your business skills! 



HUM 




Date: Dec. 8 — Friday 
Time: 7 p.m. 

Place Hillel Apt , j24 W Pensacola, Penwood Apts. B-15 

Reservations required. Call 222-5454 or sign up at the Hillel table at the FSU 
courtyard on Wednesday. 



CpMt|irto Inttrtdwuoiif OtfanrtiMi 



CEO would like to msh every student good luck on their exams and happy 
holidays. The first meeting of the Winter Quarter will be held in Room 246 on the 
first SaUirday. after classes begin at 1 p.m. AU students are welcomed to attend. 



An Open Letter te/from "TIm fiople" 



The People for Rational Marijuana Laws would like to take this opportunity to 
thank all the people throughout the FSU community who have contributed to the 
"People's" Great Cause. In less than two months, the "People" have made the 
transition from being a little more than a pipe dream to being an active dynamic 
lobbying effort Our successful fund raising efforts have enabled use to set the gears 
in motions to proceed full speed ahead with: a massive mailing campaign throughout 
the state, literature printing, media time purchases, the development of a 
comprehensive "white paper" based on the positive experiences of other states that 
now have rational marijuana laws, and hire a full-time lobbyist and supportive staff. 
Also, plans are in motion to establish chapters of "The People" in Gainesville, 
Tampa, and other locations throughout Florida. 

The People will be holding a general meeting on Friday, Jan. 5 at a place and time 
to be announced So watch The Flambeau when y'all get back from vacation for 
further details. Also, the People plan to have another wild and crazy Benefit Party at 
Tommy's after the Christmas break! Anyone that was not at the last Benefit has 
probably heard that they missed one of the great rock and roll events in TallahasSM 
history. We're confident that the next event will be even more successful. 

Finally, due to the fantastic demand for The People's T-shirts, we've set up outlets 
at High Quality Head Quarters on S. Monroe St. near College Ave. and Co-op 
Records All proceeds from the T-shirts go to the lobbying effort. Correspondence 
and contributions may be sent to The People for Rational Marijuana Lms, P.O. Box 
6021, Tallahassee, Fl., 32301. ^ 

We're confident that with enough support and positive energy, The People are 
going to achieve the goal of having a rational marijuana law become part of the 
Florida Statutes in 1979. However, "The People" will only see this happen when The 
People make it happen. That means that we need energy and input from eve ryone, 
all The People, who are tired of living in a State of Irrationality with respect to 
marijuana laws Be Rational! Help "The Peopk" help yourself 1 One Generation of 
Felons is enough! 



Notice 

HwM on Hm iMt S6 fa«M of the Mi qiMrter. CM Prtsideirts sImmM dMck llwir bwM ■Iter tiM bradi for dttab 



frM odvartising spM9 fcf wMmI ftf wttn Mi cm M4-IS11 Mi Mk fir Iht OMn tf 



li 




4 / Monday, December 4, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 

Bundy trial postponed indefinitely 



ffOffl StSfff fWdKHtB 

The Florida Supreme Court Friday postponed indefinitely 
the murder trial of Theodore Bundy while it decides if 
Circuit Judge John Rudd can give Bundy a fair trial. 

The trial, where Bundy faces two charges of first degree 
murder and related charges in the pre-dawn killings of two 
Chi Omega sorority sisters and the beatings of three other 
women Jan. 15. was set to begin today. 

Bundy Thursday asked the supreme court to prevent 
Rudd from presiding over the trial, and the court will now 
ask Rudd to respond to Bandy's petition and consider both 
before making a decision. Rudd has until Dec. 8 to submit 
his response. 

In a separate action Friday, Rudd said he would delay the 
trial until the Supreme Court issued iks decision. Bandy has 
filed a motion before Rudd asking to postpone Jthe trial until 
after Christmas. 

WmOf, mimim$ been $cltim ^ own lawyer in the 
case, also consented to tidce on the services of PiibBc 
Defender Michael Minerva. 

Bundy said Oct. 3, the day he was granted a two-m<mth 



trial delay. "I'm going to stick with the man I trust the 
most — and that's me." Rudd several times had suggested 
Bundy. who studied law for one year in Utah, take a public 
defender. 

Bundy's bid to get Atlanta lawyer Millard Farmer to 
defend him was quashed by Rudd, whose permission was 
needed because Farmer is not a member of the Florida Bar. 

Bundy claims Rudd is no longer impartial and cannot give 
him a fair trial because Rudd talked with case investigators 
and prosecutors without notifying the defense. 

Bundy has evidence backing up his allegations, including 
sworn statements from an assistant public defender and an 
investigator from the public defenders office. 

These tiro affidavits corroborate the fact that Rudd 
received at least one te]e^>hone call from a law forcemeat 
official in Pensacda detaOing the progress of Bmidy's 
interrogation thero. 

Bundy was in jail in P^nsacola in mid-Febniafy after 
bemg arrested there for driving a stolen Vc^ESwagen and 
possessing stolen credit cards. He later became the leading 
suspect in the Jan. 15 murders. 



America uses 12 tons of pot a day 



by wtlNam cotterell 

united press infariMtiOMl 

ATLANTA — Former White House health advisor Dr. 
Peter Bourne says America's appetite for marijuana has 
grown to 12 tons a day and has made pot smuggling the 
nation *s third biggest industry — behind only Exxon and 
General Motors. 

Bourne said Saturday that pot trafficking had become 
somewhat like prohibition-era rum running — 
flourishing and difficult to stop. 

"The Commerce Department estimates that the 
marijuana business is the third leading business in the 
country, totaling some $48 billion and exceeded only by 
Exxon and General Motors," he said. 

"In Florida, it's the state's largest industry, exceeding 
even tourism,*' said Bourne, now a Washington 
consultant on health programs. He said foreign bank 
accounts in Miami totalled $25 million two years ago, but 
now are $250 million — *> substantial amount of h" 
finaiiciBg marijuana. 

Bourne said mnilBana can be a heidth hazard, and 
that Its popularity among the young is particularly 
dangerous because they lack the judgment older pot 
smokers have. Aside from whether pot *'rots yoqr 
brain,*' Bourne said, "just the fact it's an intoxicating 
substance and we've got a large number of teenagers 



staying intoxicated is problem enough." 

Bourne, a proponent of smaller marijuana penalties for 
smokers, told the Southeastern Conference on 
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse he does not favor 
legalization of the drug because it can be dangerous 
physically, politically and economically. He also said the 
United States has treaty obligations with other nations, 
which would be disrupted if American pot laws were 
repealed. 

"By and far the most difficult drug that we've had to 
face in Washington, that the whole country faces, is 
marijuana," said Boiime, adding that "the marijuaiut 
issue has become a politician's nightmare." 

Bourne, one of President Carter's closest medical 
advisors when he was governor and a candidate for the 
White House, resigned last summer when it was 
revealed he wrote a sedative prescription for an aide 
without using her true name. 

Bourne said pot business is no longer coiiducted by 
small airplanes and fishing boats, but by large ocean- 
going freighters that anchor outside the three-mile limit 
and send pot ashore by the ton in faster boats. He said 
smugglers also use jets to outrun customs airplanes, 
adding that the customs service is hopelessly 
unequipped, with only seven planes patrolling all 
borders. 



Regents from page 



committee wjll report to the Board today on the magnitude 
of the problem. The universities will also submit a plan 
addressing the best method of establishing a budget 
reserve, indicating what areas they feel the money should 
be taken fr#m. 

To compensate for the expected shortage, the Board is 
expected* to ask the universities to provide for a budget 
reserve of one percent, or $2,773,296. 

Also at today's meeting, the BOR will develop a priority 
list from the total $330 million Giiir^ ^^^^f^j^yj 
the universities have requested. ~ ' ^ 

In contrast to the emphasis on new buildings 
characteristic of recent years, this year's capital outlay will 
focus on renovation and repair. The BOR expects between 



$40 million and $50 million for the 1978-79 biennium, or 
roughly $280 million less than the universities have 
requested. 

In July, the Board approved a recommendation by the 
programming and planning committee requiring state 
agencies participating in the Service Through Applied 
Research (STAR) program to pay for 10 percent of the cost 
of the research they request. Due to considerable criticism 
of the program by several participating agencies, the 
Poard wifl reconsider the fimding requirement. 
^ last weeic, the council of presidents — -Ih^ presidents of 
all nine SUS universities — voted to return to the STAR 
program's previous policy under which all agency- 
requested research is firee. 



Dederich faces trial ojn attempted murder charge 



KINGMAN, Ariz. (UPI) — Synanon founder Charles 
?Dederidi was arra^ned b^^ind locked doors in a %xmpM 
room yesterday in connection wt^ a rattlesnake attack on 
an attorney and his lawyers refused to waive his 
extradition to CaHfomia to lace trial oa mtlesipted murder 
charges. 

De<terich, 66, lay with ^es closed and did not speak 
during the 2S-minute heari^ in Mcteve General Hospital. 
The fudge saitf lie.4i«l naUMmm wheth^ the suspect was 

r 




conscious or not. 

Ilail of $SOO,€0^waa m ^ JoatiGe of ftaoe Everett 
G. Milam who ordered an extradition hearing for Jan. 2 
either in Kingman or Lidie Havasn City, Ariz., depending 
on Dederich*s health. 

No news reporters or members of the public were 
allowed info the ttM floor room. A uniformed officer and 
several ptaindotbes sherlTs deputies patrolled the 
corridor. 




Theodore Bundy 



robartolMv 



for 

college blahs. 



Ws a feeling that slowly descends upon 
you. The exams, the pop tests, the required 
reading, the hours at the library, the thesis— 
they won't go away. 

But you can. This weekend, take otf, say 
hello to your friends, see the sights, have a 
great time. You'll arrive with money in your 
pocket because your Qf^^^omd trip doesn t 

If you're feeling tired, depressed and 

exhausted, grab a Greyhound and split. It's a 























Montgomery 


SWJS 






f:3tp.n»- 


West PaHn 


fif Iff 






}:Sia.m. 


Beach 










Orlando 


S16.N 


t31.«S 


«:Mp.m. 


St Pete 


S17.t5 


S33 95 


2:Mp.m. 


9:10 p m 


Lakeland 


$19.00 


136 10 


8:30 a m 


3 35 0 m 


ASK your agent about addrtnnal defumires and return trips 






•ssubfBctiDciia 


"0»l 





J O Peck 



112 



Dr. 



Pod 



to cci 
CQitt durinj 
Neoly hj 
•o adequat 
Govern iDeni 
(Sand 0)ri 
were reque< 
couid fund 
Because th< 
requests, tl 
amount of 
student t( 
All of 
committee 
will not I 
promised 
awarded ap| 
budget, thej 
clubs who 
more than i! 

•*AII of 
telling the I 
make bud^< 
Chairpcrsorj 
who aticndti 
guidelines 
re-quirem" r 

"Beeaii 
guidelines 
funds, m 
get all th 



Stud 
or 

pri 

If an 




1 iar7« 



FSU professor MAPs his solution to inflation 



I 




Of iHiivwii rdhi 

loibitioo in the U.S. could be eliminated 
I ^st three months, says one FSU 



Dr. Abba Lerner 



Dr. Abba Lerner, a member of the 
National Academy of Sciences, first 
outlined his Market Mechanism Anti-infla- 
tion Plan (MAP) at the Atlantic Economics 
Conference in October. 

According to Lerner, current government 
policies cause a combination of inflation and 
unemployment, known as stagflation. 

**The government treatmg inflation as if 
it were caused by excess demand, holds 
down prices," he said. "Then when the 
resulting unemployment threatens to reach 
double digits, it relaxes the restrictions, 
raising spending just enought to give us 
Stagflation." 

. The graduate of London School of 
Economics has '^^^ ' 



frabfished and ts th' an hor o( nearlv a 
dozen books, including several dcaimg with 
inflation. 

Lemer's MAP extends the use of market 

mechanisms, such as competiton. from 
governing wages and prices to governing 
net sales, which are a combination of wages 
and profits. 

By UH)king at net sales, of which wages 
arc the largest portion, there will be more 
cooperation between managers and workers 
as both sides realize they are partners in the 
firms operations, Lerner said. 

Each finn would be issued Anti-taflatfcMi 
Credits (AlC) equal to its net sales» whtch 
would then be Hnked to the national 
productivity rate. 

*'A firm's AIC would give it the right to 
engage in net sales of 103 percent of the 
face value of its AIC," Lerner said. "If a 



.,1... 



1 m 



perCenr of its AIC. it has incurred a deficit 
and mus! bu\ an equal amount of AIC to 
offset the deficit." 
The opposite would be true io tlie case of 

a surplus. 

Lerner sass that competition wi>uld exert 
an anti-inflationary force of firms to reduce 
price increases in order \o save on the 
purchases of AIC or to set free some more 
AIC for sale. 

"The market mechanisms would be free 
to work under this plan." he said. 
' Competition would encourage efficiency." 

Althovgh many people Had MAP 
incieiMble. the iaitiai respoMe km beea 

enthttsaaatk, according to Lerner. 

"People can't believe that inflation can 
be stopped in a few^months," Lerner said 
"I really don't think it will even take that 
long, but if 1 tell people that they won't 



Poor planning causes dubs to lose SG money 



by Chris brockman 

fUMRbMu writer 

Because of poor planning and lack of 
itemized budgets, many of FSU's clubs and 
organizations will be given only enough 
money to cover their postage and printing 
costs during the upcoming quarter. 

Nearly half of the clubs failed last week 
to adequately prove to the Student 
Government Services and Organizations 
(S and 0) review board that the money they 
were requesting was needed so that they 
could function during the winter quarter. 
Because these groups did not justify their 
requests, the board drastically cut the 
amount of money they would receive ftom 
student fees. 

All of the allocations made by the 
committee are only tentative, but the clubs 
will not receive less than they were 
promised. Since the committee only 
awarded approximately $7,000 of its $8,000 
budget, thm is a chance that some of the 
clubs who applied fat fuad& wiU leeeive 
more than they expected. 

**A]] of the chibs were ami memos 
telling them about tiie seminar on liow to 
make budget requests," S and 0 boatd 
Chairperson Alan Fkatn said. "Those 
who attended the seminar were also ghren 
guidelines to foOow In writing up these 
requirements.*' 

"Because of then* failure to follow these 
guidefenes, and our limited amount of 
fiinds, many of the dubs aren't gcnng to 
get an the nioney they've asked for," he 



said. 

The groups which presented the exact 
figures and proposed uses of the requested 
funds were the ones who received the bulk 
of the money. Three of these groups, 
the India Association, the Moot Court Club 
and the Economics Graduate Students 
Association, will together receive over 
one-quarter of the Board's $8,000 budget. 
These three organizations were awarded 
this large amount of money because the 
committee decided that their planned 
activities will benefit the entire university. 

The India Association will use part of the 
$863 it was allocated to bring an Oriental 
dancer to the FSU campus during the winter 
quarter. She is scheduled to appear in 
Moore Auditorium, and the show will be 
open to all students interested in Oriental 
culture and dance. 

The Moot Court Club, allocated $695 by 
the S and O Board, will use its money to 
compete again in the National Labor Law 
Competition, which it won last year. The 
Moot Court has already won the regional 
' competiticm and plans to travel to New 
York to compete in the finals. 

The Economic Grat^uate Student 
Association wiU use $643 of the money it 
was allocated to Imng noted Texas 
econcmist Kenneth Boiilding to the FSU 
campus to speak aliout the nation's 
economy. 

The rest of the clubs did not receive 
neariy as much money. Two chibs. Science 
for the People and the Hellenic American 



"Because of their failure to 
follow these guidelines, and 
our limited amount of funds, 
many of the clubs aren't 
going to get all the money 
they've asked for' — Alan 
Ficarra, Services and 
Organizations review board 

Gub, will not reeeive any money for the 
winter quarter. They had still not spent the 
money they were given for use last quarter, 
and the committee voted in favor of not 
allocating them any more. 

The Archeology Club was given a 
dubious honor of being the orgawation to 
receive the least amount of money, $20, 



but it just barely captured this honor. The 
F$U-TaIlahassee Wargaming Club, in its 
first application for funds from the student 
government, was awarded S21 and 
members seemed pleased with their 

proposed budget. 

Only 35 of the 47 clubs that signed up for 
jthe budget hearings even botheied to show 
iup. The dubs that did not show are going 
to have to rely on their present bank 
balances to get them through winter 
quarter, as this was the only time the board 
will be coiisidertng club nqpieits te 
funds. 

Since nearly $1,000 was not allocated 
during the regular meetings, the S and O 
Board wiH meet again Thursday to decide 
how to distribute the mcmey. Some of the 
clubs asked the Board to re-review their 
requests if any money was left over, and 
these chibs wlU be te tot conideted §k 
possible budget 




« / AAondiv* Owatmter 4. 19IB FUOMIA RAM8EAU 



iFloridaa 




Stop Thursday emrutions in Utah 

Murder 

Dale Piere and William Andrews, some would argue, 
are two of the m<»:e heiiioiis persons in America. The two, 
hotii foffiaer Air Focee enlisted men, sit cm death nm in 
Si^ Lake City. 

In 1974, Piere and Andrews tortured and murdered 
three people during a hold-up. Next Thursday, they could 
be the next men since Gary Gilmore to be legally put to 
dea^ in . ^ Umled States. 

GHkObte was fcffled two years ago by the state of Utah m 
die same manner that state plans to kill Piere and 
Andrews: by firing squad. If all goes according to the 
schedule of the state of Utah, the two will be strapped to 
wooden chairs Thursday and shot through their hearts. 

Scmeeali it justice — an eye for an eye, alifefor a life. 
Some call it a deterrent to violent crime — kill the killers 
and others will think twice before pulling the trigger or 
thrusting the knife or swinging the club. 

Some call it capital punishment; we call it murder. 

Our arguments against the death penalty — legalized 
murder — have been stated so many times we could recite 
them in our sleep, yet they still retain the same validity 
they always have held. The death penalty is final. It 
precludes further appeals or new evidence tiiat might later 
prove a convicted man or woman mnocent. The celebrated 
case of Freddie Pitts and Wilbert Lee — who spent a dozen 
years on death row in Florida and later were pardoned 
when strong evidence was presented to the Florida 
Cabinet proving their innocence — jumps immediately to 
mind as but oac example. There are otl^rs. 

Application of the death penalty in study after study has 
been proven to be racist. Blacks and other minorities are 
the ones who get burned, especially if the victims in the 
crimes of which they are convicted were white. Applicatk 
of the dei^ penalty is discrimmate against the poor. 
Studies have proven, too, thirt capital punishment means 
those without the capital get the punishment. 

For every study that seems to indicate a decrease in 
violent crime or murder where the death peidttty is in 
effect there exists at least one other th|it counters that 
finding. The concluskm in surv^s thai attempt to link 
violent crime with the pr<^send6 -^r absence of capital 
punishment is that no final conclusion can be made. 

But our primary argument against murder by the state is 
the same one we would use in attempts to deter Fime and 
Andrews from their crimes, ^^ven the dianee: ^ 
sanctity of life. Life is holy; life £s aU we have; and not a 
single person^s life can be justifiably lost at the hands of 
another with the exception of self-defense. 

We can lock Piere and Andrews up for life if we must ^ 
they take thenr case^ the Utah^pgreme Court today fx 
one last request for a stay or, if they truly want to die, 
like Gary Gflmore wanted to die, tiien we can grant them 
that wish. 

Murder is on their list of crimes; for God's sake, let's not 
add itto oursl/* . j 

■■■■■ ■ * " „ ■ 

Roridt RMfib«M FoundMion Inc. iMmnaM md advwiWng ofRn 20B N. 
WqodwwMd AveniM, phone 644-4075; Mg w wro o m 2M N. Woodward Aymm, 

phone 644-5606; Production/Mediatype lab 314 University Union, phono 
644-5744; Classified ad office 306 University Union, phone 644-5785. MaHing 
address, P.O. Box U-7001, Rorida State University. TaNahanee. Flofida. 

SteveWatkins Editm: 

Beth Rudowske News Editor 

Sidney BedingfiM *i t Smarts Editmr 

?>anniVogt AaristMitNewsEttar 

Arts /Fealores Editor 



SIRS revisions bog down 
in quagmire ^ji collegiality 



Guest Column 



(Dr. Eisenbcrg Is. tmrmmw 
pmident of tiie FSU chapter «f 
United Faccdiy of Florida.) 

Surely there are few items in 
the professional lives of the FSU 
faculty about which so many 
strong opinions exist as the SIRS, 
which is, by Faculty Senate rule, 
to be administered in all classes 
at FSU this quarter. 

Some faculty are strongly 
opposed to any type of student 
evaluation of teaching as well as 
to this specific instrument. Even 
those receptive in principle to the 
procedure, including those who 
administer the SIRS system at 
FSU, readily admit that it was 
intended to gather information 
about student perceptions of 
teaching quality and not as it is 
currently being used: as a basis 
for personnel actions. I share the 
concerns about this instrument 
being Blindly and mecfMmicaBy 
used in the formation of dedsioas 
on faculty promotions, temre, 
and raises. 



The SIRS is one of the few 
faculty problems at FSU which 
cannot be blamed, at least in 
part, on someone else: the 
university administration, the 
Board of Regents, the legislature. 
Also, the United Faculty of 
Florida (UFF) has no direct 
authority over the system. While 
some type of student evaluation 
of teaching is mandated, the 
choice of the particular instru- 
ment used at FSU was made by 
the Faculty Senate. (Other 
universities in the Florida SUS 
use significantly different means, 
usually shorter forms.) Since it 
was chosen by the Faculty 
Senate, then the Faculty Senate 
surely has the authority to modify 
or replace it. The Faculty Senate 
minutes for the 1971-1973 period, 
show that the merits of the form 
were endlessly discussed, both in 
the Senate itself and in Senate 
committees, without any action 
being taken. ^ ; 

FranCfMnmittee. . . 

In the fafl of 1977, 
Choppin, at that time president of 
die Facu% Se&ate, i^pokilpd ar 
committee of ten fiKulty and.^vo 
administrators to formi|late 
recommendations for the revision 
of the SIRS system. This 
oc»nniittee, of which I was a 
member, met oMMtfify during the 
1977-78 academic year. We 
designed a questicmnaire, ctrcu- 
llUMl tt /aipong all faculty, aiMl 
tabulated the responses, and 
drew on these plus our own 




Daniel Bsenberg 



discussions and philosophy in 
formulating recommendations 
concerning the SIRS. These 
recommendations were transmit- 
ted to the Faculty Senate in April 
of this year. 

The recommendations were 
both procedural and sabstmtive. 
The ad hoc committee reoem- 
niei^ed that the office admini- 
stering die SIRS be funded more 
adet|uately so that results could 
be available promptly, and that 
questions inapplicable to certain 
types* of courses (class discussion 
in large lecture courses, for 
example) be deleted in the 
scoring process. Since multi- 
section courses are often taught 
by persons other than those 
determining the syllabus, it 
recommended that a composite 
report for all sections of a course 
be sent to the person responsible 
for its design. 

To correct the misuse of the 
SIRS in personnel actions, the 
committee recommended that a 
statement of principle concerning 
its proper use be drawn up by a 
Faculty Senate committee and 
incorporated in the university 
promotion and tenure guidelines. 
It recommended that a space on 
the printout be reserved for 



interpretative comments by ^ 
^ostmctor, who could also attidi| 
statement to it. it recommended 
that a standing faculty commr^ 
supervise the SIRS program 
TeCammlttee... 

^ The fate of these recommen4 
tioos smce their submission to 
Faculty Senate last spnng ;s . 
instructive lesson in the \^ork - 
of a bureaucracv in this case m 
elected bureaucracy. 

The recommendations u.,*. 
"accepted" by a motion nf 
Faculty Senate at its mcctmi; • 
May 17. Following this mouoi, 
nothing was done 

After reminders, the recorr 
mendations were taken up at the 
latest Senate meeting, that of 
Nov. 15. After some discussioiol 
the substance of the recom- 
mendations, it was moved and 
passed to. . .refer them to another 
committee for consideration! A 
committee, moreover, whidi ha 
not met at all during the quana; 
the actual subcommittee a 
consl^ the topic has not beci 
set up as of this writbg. 

The net resuh of this actioeii 
to pie vent any wsptwtaffA d 
^ SIRS this year. 

Cam tha Faculty ?i i ■■! > Iwii 

M this were the first time tk 
issue had come up and the first ad 
hoc committee on the subject. 1 
would be more optimistic aboit 
the proposed changes in the SIRS 
being either implemented or 
rejected. However, it is not thf 
first such attempt to reform • 
SIRS, nor is it the second. T"' 
present Faculty Senate, meetiri* 
monthly with a fixed meetiri 
length, seems no more able 
handle a philosophically compiei 
issue than have previous ones 
Can collegiality get things done' 

It behooves those who beli. 
in decision-making by colleri 
bodies, and those who oppose tl^ 
existence of a faculty union. »s 
well as administrative higii 
handedness, to show that they at 
able to resolve this question. 

If it were vnf to the union, we 
have taken care of it long ago 



Exigence of existence? 



' Mfheie the eYidettce of opoSent 
affluence is the effluence of 
emoienoe and an ex<^lieace is 
elegant Sequence, there Is a 
persistaace and presence of 
commonsense intdligence and 
competence where thought has 
permanence in an ambience of 



Hence, be aware of the 
pretense that circumvents the 
reHcencc of the audience and 
influences innocence — it is an 
instance of arrogance and a sense 



of confidence in Ae inference of 
ignoraace aiul sahservience 

recipients ift the audience. 

It is a prevalence of immcifi^ 
indifference in the deterence to 
preeminence and obedience 
omnipotence. The consequcn^'^ ^ 
continence, impotence, ^'^ 
ambivalence. 

There is mo penitence 
impudence nor is there rec«^ 
pense for the negligence of t 
exigence of existence. 



FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Monday. 



4. 1978 / 7 



OUTERWEAR SALE! 





WHERE THE GOOD 



rons 

CHRISTMAS BUYS ARE 



From two famous makers . . . pull-over and 
cardigan sweaters in Orion acrylics, 
100% acrylics, polyester/wool Uemls. 
StyM with crew necks, V-necks, button 
and zip fronts. Many stripes, solids, tone 
on tones in Tan, Blue, Rust, Brown, Navy, 
Black. In sizes Sm-XL. 



now 







men's tampus . 

^sweaW,reg 
M 8 to ^22 



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OFEM OMLY II AM TOf PM 

SUNDAY 12 TO 5J0 



! i i 



t 

If 



8 / Monday, Daoember 4, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 




Copyright law 




hurt FSU 




program 



! } 



'i 



A: 



'I 



by mike freedman 

flambeau writer 

The FSU opera program will lose between $50 and 
$1 ,000 as a result of the 1976 Copyright Revision Act that 
went into effect last January. 

**If we follow the letter of the law it could cost us 
thousands of dollars; if we follow the spirit of the law we 
will pay more, but the artists will get what they deserve," 
said R.J. Murray, head of the FSU opera program. Murray 
added he hoped costs would only go up $50 to $100, but the 
aew \Mm could mean $1,000 in additional expenses. 

Dr. Bob Leach, FSU vice-president for student affairs 
said that a meeting will be held Tuesday to discuss the 
law. Leisure Program Office representatives and 
university attorneys will join Leach at the meeting. 

^*As to whether or not copyright organizations can 
enforce or make contracts as to how much peo{^ will be 
charged in advance iDr copyrighted material, this smacks 
of possible anti-trust and price fixing violations.** said 
university attorney Gerald Ja^. 

Jaski noted that ^ OBS network is involved in a U.S. 
Supreme Court suh against both the American Society of 
Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP^ and 
Broadcast Music Incorporated (BMI), the two largest 
copyright agencies. 

*'Networks have entered agreements with ASCAP and 
BMI on a yearlv, fixed basis that has nothing to do with 



how often the copyrighted material is used." said Jaski. 
who added that members of the National Association of 
University Attomies were planning suits^ on similar 
grounds. 

It also will be harder to get more than five copies of 
material from the inter-library loan systems 
which distributes information among different libraries. 

"For the sixth person, there is a possibility that they 
won*t be able to get it,** said James F. Jones, assistant 
library director for FSU. 

Jones also said that the new law prevents classroom 
teachers from duplicating certain types and amouats of 
materials. 

Permission from the copyrighting agency is also needed 
for a teacher to put a book mi reserve for class use. 

it is still legal to make a copy of educational material for 
private use. 

And many musical programs have been stopped at 
Tallahassee Community College because TCC has not yet 
paid $3 IB for a license to use copyrighted musk. 

Florida A & M University, however, seems to be 
unaffected by the new copyright rules. 

**We have not been affected because 'we*ve complied 
with the law. I have frequently asked the university 
attorney for clarification," said Dr. William P. Foster, 
director of university bands at FAMU. 

Charles Steadman. owner of Blade Agency of 



Jones had $10 million in secret accounts 



SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) ~ The Rev. Jim Jones 
apparently accumulated at least $10 million in secret 
bank accounts scattered around the world before leading 
more than 900 Peoples Temple members in a bizarre 
murder suicide pact. 

The financial saga of Jones, who started from humble 
origins in Lynn, Ind., began to emerge yesterday in 
newspaper reports on both the West and East coasts. 

The New York Times reported thst Jones had 
established at least six and perhaps more than a dozen 
bank aeeomito m Switzeriand, Panama, Guyana and 
other countries, using anonymous numbered accounts 
and dummy corporations. 

A mysterious international battle has begun for the 
forfttne which some former chinch members estimate to 
be as high as $15 million, the newspaper said. 



In California, real estate was a million dollar business 
for the Peoples Temple during its heyday, the San 
Francisco Examiner said in a copyright story. Even 
though most Peoples Temple holdings were sold by the 
time of the death tragedy at the church*s Guyana 
mission, the cult still gets income fri>m other properties 
acqinred by purchase or gift, the newspaper said, 

A detailed look at real estate records in Los Angeles, 
San Francisco and Mendocino counties disclosed that the 
total value of property held by the cult over a period of 
just a few years exceeded $2 million, much of it donated 
by members who gave all their worldly possessions to 
Jones' church to show themselves as true Christians. 

By contrast, the report said, Joties did not give up to 
the church property belonging to him personally. 



InBnei 



m 



THE FUTURE OF NUCLEAR ENERGY 
will be the topic of a panel discussion today 
at 8 p.m. in the FSU Chemistry Lecture 
Hall. Faculty members from meteorology ^ 
physics, oceanography and government 
will take part. A social period will precede 
the discussion at 7:30 p.m. 

A CARDIO PULMONARY RECUSITA- 
TION course begins tonight at 6:30 at 
Godby High School and every Monday 
until Dec. 18. The fee is $2.50, and 
registration is at the first class meeting. 
For more information call 488-1325. 

PHYSICAL FITNESS will be the topic of 
Tuesday's brown bag luncheon at the 
Brokaw-McDougall House, 329 N. 
Meridian from 12:10 to 12:50 p.m. To 
pre-register, call 644-3801. Dr. Linda 
Bittner will be the featured speaker. 

THE CPE BALLROOM DANCE class 
will meet at 7 p.m. Mondays starting today 
in Room 214 Chemistry ClassrocMB 
Building instead of the Union. 

ALL BUSINESS SIXJDENTS must attend 
the fhrst chiss meeting of winter quarter 
business classes or notify the departmental 
office in writing prior to the first class 

meeting m order to reiMn tlieir s|wce in the 

class. 

nOJECT CSmm, a united Way 



program that provides diristmas gifts for 
patients in area phychiatric facilities, is 
now soliciting gifts. Please take unwrapped 
presents to any Publix Supermarket by 
Thursday. Arrangements can also be made 
to pick up unwrapped gifts. For more 
information, call 488-4311 or 224-0259. 

THE THIRD ANNUAL FLORIDA- 
YUGOSLAVIA day will be marked with a 
three-day international meeting beginning 
today at the Hilton Hotel. FSU President 
Bernard Sliger will open the meeting at 1 
p.m. A registration fee for local 
participants will cover all conference 
activities in addition to a copy pf the 
proceedings. 



Weather 



Skies will remain cloudy through 
tonight, with a chance of showers and 
thunderstorms beginning early in the day 
and continuing through tonight. The clouds 
will clear partially tomorrow. The current 
warm trend should last throi^ today, 
turning cooler tonight and tomorrow. 
Today's high will be near 80, with lows 
tonight in the 40s. The high tomorrow will 
drop to the upper The probability of 
rain today and fought %''r-^<'fttoe$!i. 
Southerly winds of IS to 20 m.p.h. wffl shift 
to northwesteriy ton^it as well. 



Gainesville, a company which supplies manv musual acts 
to Florida colleges, said •'there has definitely been m 
increase in non-musical entertainment like comedy tad 
lectures." 

Authors and composers are not the only ones who still 
stand to make more money because of the CopyriglH 
Revision Act. 

Paul On. owner of Ort's music store, said, "l hive 
customers who say* 'I better buy this becanse of the ae« 
copyright law.* ** 



LPO 






MONDAY NIGHT ^ 
FOOTBALL 
DOWN UNDER 9P.M. 

T Advent Color TV Screen 
H^REE ADMISSION 




TONIGHT 



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Luncfi Menu 



/Morxfay thru Friday 

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2 - Fri«d ScoHbjK ^ US 

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4 - Fried Grouper Fingers J.75 

$ - Fried Speckled Tr<.ui 3.M 

6 - Fried MuUet 3.00 

7 - Comb«notionof anv2abo¥e 4.W 

Any ot rhe obOMfflrailcd SOc extra 
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AH order* 




M». • - '/a FritdChicktn 2^ ' a Fried CNckcn 

Served with French Fries Solod Bor and aott 

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Sen«d wifh Frrnph Fr «». SakM« tbr and Roll 

Mew 10 . HcwnbufQcr Steok 

Served wiMt Frencit Fries. Solod Bor ond 



SjPO 



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ST. MARKS, FLORIDA. Straight out Woodville Highway II miles Sowttt 



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Ashottc 




ncled Bouibon 




First lesson: 
Bonded Bourbon is so 

unique that it took an 
act of Congress (in 1897) 
to estaMish tiie 

standards for 
Old Grand-Dad 
and othar Bonded 
\^^iidceys. 



Old Grand-Dad 
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Kentadcy sour-mash 
Bourbon, made with 
pure limestone watei^ 
the finest grains, 
and aged in new 
chdned-oak barrels. 



100 is perfect. 
Boiufed Bourbcm 
mMs^ be 100 proof. 
No more. No less. 



Final exam. 

You need only one 
sip to recognize 
the deariy superior 

2uality and taste erf 
)ld Grand-Dad. 
Cheenri 




Only Bonded 
wh^ce}^ have a greai 
tax stamp. It's your guar- 
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Old Grand-Dad Bonded m 
aluMiys aged longen 



■'■'■m^i^^^-^'^ Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskev. 100 proof 

Bottled m Bond. Oid Grand-Dad Distillery Co., Frankkpt. K|C 40601. 



i 




10 / Monday, December 4, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Full circle: The Klan is back 



by boyd lewis 

pacific news service 

(Bi^d Lewis reports on the 
KKK wmd other polHical 
issues for National Public 
Radio and WABE, AUanta, 
as wcH as for sevenl 
Sootbem publicaliaaa.) 

ATLANTA, <Ja. — 'Wc 
do not burn a cross but 
rather we light it to show 
that the Christian religion 
and the white race exdudes 
darkness/' the spealLer 
declares. **This is a symbol 
that does not desecrate the 
cross but rather lights it up 
and shows that light expells 
darkness.*' 

Several hundred men, 
women and chS^ren ate 
gathering in the furrows 
and stubble of what was 
once a bean patch in north 
central Alabama. To the 
front is a flat bed trailer 
where a half dozen 
speakers take turns ad- 
dressing the crowd over the 
roar of a portable genera- 
tor. About 100 yards to the 
rear is a 30 foot high 
wooden cross wrapped in 
burlap and soaked in oil. 
The air this night in early 
October is cold enough but the words the men speak add 
an almost electric chill: 

'*Our children, even we adults, are being brainwashed 
day after day, in race-mixing churches that preach the 
false doctrine of racial equality, on television where we see 
TV program after TV program belittling the white man, 
building up the nigger race. In the schools they call it 
social studies where they teach black history. They call 
Martin Lucifer Coon the greatest living American." 

The Ku Klux Klan is back. Founded by Confederate 
veterans oi the Cm War m 1867 tfeie Ku Khi^ — which 
comes from the Greek word "kuklos'* meaning circle — 
feels its fortunes have come lull drde after a decade of FBI 
uilUtratlofi and relative cabn fcXkrtimg the heydi^ of the 
Ova SItfits moveflMHt. 

Acoof&if to die So^Uiem Cliristian Leadership 
Conferace (SCLC), reports kicreaised Klan activity, 
rallies, and cross burnings began oooaiig m over the 
summer and spring friom Loaislana; Georgia, Mississipi^, 
Michigan, lUj^ats and btt ml&ary liases titroughout the 
cuantfy; 

Klan cross burnings and^mtimidatiotB shut doi^ a voter 
registration campaign in soiltheasftefn Arkansas operated 
by the Vbtcr Edncatioii Pn^. VEP officials Is Atlalnta 
reported an outbreak ol fiiui^activity . in the northern 
panhandk of t^lDHda v " 

Thfoiig|botti the suinniRir black demdnstratofti^'and 
klahsman have been exchanging ^treats and at tknes 
gunshots in Tupelo and Okolona. Miss. ' ^ 

On the first and second days of October, the Klan 
showed up in force at Cullman, Ala., about an hour's drive 
north of Birmingham to stop a march of black 
demonstrators organized by the SCLC. The demonstrators 
were attempting to march on the Cullman County 
counhouse to protest the selection of an all-white jury to 
hear the trial of a black maa acciised of raping a wfap|te 
woman. 

The man, 26-year-old Tommy Lee Mines, is retarded. 
The trial had begun in Decatur, Ala., but constant clashes 
between SCLC and the Klan resulted in a ohangt; j?f venire 
to Cullman, about 35 miles to the south. 

The Rev. R.B^. Cottonreader is a project director for 
SCLC and has led protests over the trial in Decatur and 
Cullman. Ala. In early October he led a march to the 
Cullman city limits where he was met by a much larger 
groups of whites, Klansmcn among them and many of 
them heavily armed. "We have th^ same white folks we 




dealr with in the sixties. We have the same racism,** 
Coitonreadcr said. 

"I don't think it's really a revival. I think they've always 
been here but they're just beginning to robe and come 
out." 

The Klan is also flexing its muscles in Arkansas. Mary 
Budd. of Crossett, Ark., is president of the local NAACP 
chapter. The arrest of a Klansman last month for 
harrassing black schiMl children at a highway school 
crossing touched off a wave of cross burning in Crossett 
and throughout the delta coumry of south^tetn 
Arkansas. As a result ,„ the voter education campaign run 
by Budd collapsed for fear itf what the KUm miglit do next. 

;it was a disaster," she said. "Not tight away, but 
people just gradually piitlHid clit. They refused to be part of 
it, bec^Kkse we were^ tfild they just didn't want to get 
involved with the sffuaritk^*' 

For Bin WUkinson, Imperial Wizard of the Invls^ 
IBmpire of file Ku Klux -Klan, (this, aiid other confrontations 
have won many new members for his orgamzatioa. **Look 
at the tremendous response we*ye had at the rallies,** he 
said. "A1 our first Decatur .rally -*^'S,O0O. Qur second rally 
^11 ,000. Our march \m the Cidlman courthouse over 
1 ,000 people inside of four hours, just by ptadng a sign 6» 
tthe grass." ■ ' ^ ' 

- "Since spring and early summer of 1979 the Invisible 
IBmpire has over doubled its membership nationwide. And 
I'd say a large proportion of that was hi the South. There's 
no d\)ubt in my mind that before '78 is out we will have 
tripled, and if things keep accelerating at tiie rate they a^e, 
we may quadruple our strength.'* 

At a Klan rally between CuUman and Hanceville, a 
1 7-year-old high sch(X)l junior from Birmingham appeared 
nervous as he addressed the crowd. He was there to ask 
Klan support for a youth group he and others had formed 
at his 60 percent black high school. 

"You could say, maybe, we're working close with the 
Klan," he admitted. *'I believe the things we learned in 
history class about the Supreme Court's old separate but 
equal ruling. I believe blacks should go to their own 
schiH>ls and that whites should go to their own schools and 
be able to stay away from the blacks if they want to." 

As (he rally drew to an end, about 40 Klansmen in full 
regalia iiH>k up positions around the cross with flaming 
torches. They saluted the burlap-wrapped cross and 
marched in to ignite it at the base. Thirty feet of flame 
empied into the cold Alabama night air. 




OVER 3000 PAIR NIEN'S & WOMEN'S 

JEANS 

ako fWMfw-s, skktt, tops i iack$H 

NOTHING OVER HQ 

576-2196 SiiopiiiBt Ctrnw Open 7 days 




FSV SCHOOL 
OF MUSIC 

presents 

THE UNIVERSITY SYMPHOM 
ORCHESTRA 

PHU.UP SPURGEON, Conductor 
DEBORAH EGEKVIST, Flute 

music by 

SIBELIUS/ CARL NIELSEIS/ 
DVORAK (Symphony Ao. 8) 

MONO A Y EVENING, DECEMBER i. 

1978 - 8:15 PM. ■ RUBY DUMOND 

AUDITORIUM 

Tickets available now at the Central Ticket Office 
in the Univertity Union Building and will be 
available at the Ruby Diamond Box Office the 
evening of the peifqnnance only. 

FSU STUDENTS: Friae with validated ID 
ADULTS: $3.50/NON FSU STUDENTS AND 
SENIOR CITIZENS: $1.75 




SBIMR BSn nURSES 



You may be eligible for an exciting 
and rewarding nursingcirier in the USAF 
upon graduatlof^. 

The Air Force now off^ a five 
month internship program that will Quali- 
fy you for world-wide duty. 

For more details on this and other 
Air Force nursing oppc^nities contact: 



CAPTAIN WARREN WARD 
4640 Orange Blossom Trail Room 901B 
Orlando, Florida 32809 
CALL COLLECT: 306/856-2830 



Jackson 



hods (of dealing wiUi poantioo) it's one of die leait 

expensive.** 

Byrne and FSU chemistry student Charles Donalme 
have spent the lait 1 1 months monitoring the levels of 
pollutants present in the lake for the Deportmeat of 
Environmental Regulations (DER) and the Northwest 
Florida Water Maaagement District. These two trts tf 
organizations are currently involved in 
bio-filtratkm system s reality. 

The current project has been gnuritod $1^ n^ioo fi 
the state legislatuie and the EavmrnmeBtal Ptotectioo 
Agency. It was begmi in 1977 set to be completed In live 
years. The target completkm ^rte Is stifl 1961 , but officials 
woridng for the IHER aad Water Manngemeiit District say 
that additional doUars — requiring legi^tive approval — 

win prolNMy be needed «f the pofchaae of lands requited 
for impiementatiOB of Hie astern begin t3 drain the 
current money pool. 

ffio-Qttra^ is especially inexpensive. Byrne and 
Dooalwe said, wh^ tfie price of testoring a poUuted lake 

"There is a project in South Florida to restore Lake 
Apopka,** Byrne said. '*The WII for that project is 
somewhere near $12 miBion." 

Fur th er m or e , there are several complications, involving 
the seasonal agriculture industry surrounding Lake 
Apopka, which Byrne said may drive the figure even 
higher. 

The water quality of Lake Jackson — the only freshwater 
body termed an aquatic preserve by the state legislature 
— has not dipped anywhere near the tragic conditions 
found in Lake Apopka. 

In Lake Apopka the few tlsh found swimming in the lake 
are either pike or gar which survive on relatively low levels 
of oxygen. The bass and bream which have pleased 
anglers fishing around northern areas of Lake Jackson not 
stressed by an urban environment died from lack of 
oxygen in Lake Apopka years ago. i 

Nonetheless, the water quality of Lake Jackson has been 
noticeably affected by Tallahassee, Byrne and Donahue 
noted. 

"You can actually see die quality of the water change,** 
Donahue said, **as you move from the northern sections of 
the lake towards the south (where the heavy urban areas 
exist)." The turbidtty becomes ^eater in the southern 
part of the lake and there are excessive levels of 
phosphates and nitrogen nutrients, he added. 

The idea of nutrient-rich waters being polluting waters 
may seem strange, but according to Donahue and Byrne, 
excesses of phosphates and nitrates, which aid in plant 
growth, serve to actually choke the litfe out of a closed body 
such as a lake. 

From talking with these two, it seems this choking effect 
is sometMng like a man trapped in a cell who, although 
weO fed, wffl eventuafiy suffer miserably and die in a 
cfiseased environment as his excrement piles up about 
hkn. In a closed tody such as a lake, these excess nutrients 
act to ^peed op the rate at wfakh the metabolic by-products, 
or crap, collects. 

Plants in a bio-filtratiDii system^ which can be easily 
harvest and relMwed; i^isocl» ^ maoas nutrients 
before «^ nutrfents rea<& Ibe toke body. Thus, the 
excess phosphates and nitrates arc removed as the 
harvested plants are carried awigr to be homed or buried 
elsewhere. 

The source of pdtlutants for Lake Jackson is a small 
creek which winds its way behind two shoppteg maBs 
(Northwood and Tallahassee), throu^ a higWy orban^area 
of asphalted roads and roofs, tfien under Interstate 10 
before emptying into th^ southern Megfamis Arm seifioii 
of the lake. . : . 

The creek serves as a storm-waterron-cif ditch for these 
urban areas, carrying rain wato* which washes over the 
large mall parking lots and numerous paved roads. These 
waters carry large quantities of nutrients, eroded sand and 
clay, and poisonous petroleum hydrocarbons into the lake. 

••Water coming off of the mall parking lots fsHs into the 
creek in sheets," Byrne said. "The bio-filtration system 
should help to improve the water's quality in M^^iS 
Arm, but all of this is still on paper the system has 
never been used on such a large basis.** 

The Lake Jackson system will use three arcM Of 
filtration located along the creek on its way ^ 
Jackson, according to Jean Tolman. administrator of lake 
.restoration for the DER. However, only one of these areas 
wiU use plants to absorb excessive nutrients. Tolman 



described the area as a larfe 
probably coMist primarily of catta&. — 

The other two areas wlB serve as sit icteatioa poods, 
Tolman said. The purpose of these poads will be to ooBect 
the larger aBnvial particfes eroded §nm die crook's hnk. 

At present, terse awioonti of day and sand aro swept 
lolo the teke after a heavy n^, ckMMfing the water «mI 
oovertaig over the teke's sand bottom. 

But if we havent caught it 
(the pollution) in time, 
we can just pave the lake 
and call it La^e Jadcson MaU' 
—Christian Byrne, FSU student 



FLORIDA FUMMBEAU Monday, OM^mberd, Ifit / II 



The Original 

many mutate — none comparo 



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NORTHWOOD MAU opM 10 tl f Mm Urn Set 1 tii 5:30 



WMMMMMMW 



12 / Monday, December 4, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Arts / Features 



Waits growls out more street poetry 



Review 



by Steve doNsr 



Wm YaleDtfne, Tom Waits, Asytan Kcmdi 

To the uninitiated, a Tom Waits album might sound like 
a do-it-yourself lesson in vocal destruction. Ever since he 
released his first album, "Closing Time," in 1973, the 
rasp-throated nighthawk has become progressively 
gruffer-voiced until he now sounds like he might be a 

reject from a throat-cancer ward glee choir. "Blue 
Valentine," Waits' latest release, showcases his most 
burned-out vocals yet, which vary between a low, 
Satchmo-like grow! and a gushing, whispered falsetto. 

Yet, for the initiate, the fan, Waits' low-pitched, 
rambling, scrambled vocal style is an essential. It gives a 
body to his songs, where a sweeter voice would only evoke 
a skeleton of lyrics. Like fine wine, its limited intricacies 
must be savored to be appreciated. Like a cup of black 
coffee at an all-night diner, it scalds, it bums on the way 
down. 

It's this rough edge in Waits' music that keeps him 
^hvays at the outskirts of success and pofmlarity, always 
hangin' out on the comer, bumming small change and 
rappin' with the clientele at Emma*s 49*er. 

But then the street has always been Waits* domain, and 
*'Blue Valentine," an album that is less of a progression 
than a subtie dumge of pace, shows thirt the Tomcat hasn't 
strayed too far iirom home. 

Moreen anything else, it hades up Waits' reputation 
as a stieet-poet, an objective yet sentimental observer of 
the seamy underside of urban life. Far more than 
Springsteen, who deals in a post-beat, fifty-ish kind of 
ronuntidsm, Tom Waits is an ufban shaman, a character 
in his own songs who sees life the way it is, a road that 
leads to cul-de-sacs more often than it leads home; No 
bones about it. Instead of flashing guitars and fast cars. 
Waits gives us a place filled with hookers, con-men, 
vagabonds and world-weary waitresses. 

Listen to the music. It pre-dates rock and roll and heads 
"straight for the blues, swing and be-bop. On this album, 
though, Tom picks up an electric guitar and adds some 
slow blues licks to a mix that includes the usual assortment 
of saxes, strings, solitary pianos and spare acoustic 
basses. 

"Somewhere," from West Side Story, opens up side one 
with Waits doing his Frank Sinatra-minus-vocal-chords 
imitation and frightening off all but the adventurous or 
drugged, but also establishing a scenario for the^rest of the 
album's story. Replete with backstreets, corner 
drugstores, and used-car lots — the entire imagery of a 
city of night is captured. 

"Red Shoes by the Drugstore," with its two-note 
alternating bass line and light percussion sounds like an 
incantation to an after-hours rendezvous on a black, rain- 
filled night: 

Slie waited by the drugstore 

Cesaer had never been tliis late htimte 

and the dogs bayed the moon 

and rattled their chains 

and the cold Jingle of taps In a puddle 

was the burglar alarai sniichin^ on Cesner 

Another girl, waiting on a different comer has worse 
luck. **$29.00" recalls the whole seamy underground of a 
fifties thriller. A story about a **little black girl in a red 
dress with **$29 in an alligator piurse" who strayed to 
Hollywood from Chicago. 

Slurring his voice into a near-parody ctf a black blues 
phrasing. Waits tells the tale of how a girl meets up with a 
"vulture in a fleetwood** and ends up ^'lucky to be aKvc" 




Tom Waits 

after losing "a half pint of blood, $29 amd an alligator 
purse." Screaming the blues at the end. Waits sounds like 
a monkey possessed. 

Like a late-night re-run of a detecitive thriller, the whole 
album revolves around the hardened, tough-as-nails street 
lives of its characters. On previous LPs Waits' characters 
always seemed to have a little hope held out for them, a 
chance, however slim, for a way out. They might get 
rained on by their own 45 and end up in a potter's field, 
but they could also meet a stranger in a bar, hop into a '55 
Chevy and enjoy at least one night of romance. On "Blue 
Valentine" there isn't too much hope. 

"Romeo is Bleeding" and "Christmas Card from a 
Hooker in Minneapolis" both tell the stories of people who 
took the wrong turn and ran into a dead-end alley. One, a 
hooker who writes to say she needs money to pay off her 
lawyer and says "hey, I'll be eligible for parole on 
Valentine's Day" and the other a small-time hood who 
"dies without a whimper, like every hero's dream." 

All is not dismal, though. Waits comes back on side two 
holding a guitar in one hand and flipping a bird with the 
other. "Wrong Side of the Road" describes the ingredients 
for his rebellious brew and "Whistling Past the 
Graveyard" is his anthem. 

Waits puts himself at the center of the action. A "mean 
mother hubbard papa one-eyed jack," who's no longer 
barrellin' down the boulevard but whistlin' past the 
graveyard just to prove he's tougher than all of his late 
night losers: 

1 know yon seen my hMMMghtii 

The iionkin* of my honi 

Fm callln' oof tiie bloodlwuida 

Chase the devO Oroogh tlw 

Last night I vhmggpi Okm 

Now tlMH sncken diy as a bmt 

Bora In a tari-cab 

Vm never caedn' Haew 

Those kst four Knes probably say it all for T<mi Waits. 
So put on a pot of Folgers, light up a Lucky Strike and 
settle back for a while. If you get a little hungry there's 
frfenty of action down at Emma's 49'cr. 





FAU FILM 




WUGHT! 



THE 

UIET 




The CENTER for 
Participant Education 




^ Needs Course Instructors^ 
J for Winter Quarter \ 

^ Ptok up course syllabus in the ^ 



'III 



CPE offwe 251 Univ. Union 
or call 644-6577. 



Get 
Involved 



Get 
Motivated 



Foreign Language^ 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 



TEACHERS NEBJED IN: 

Dance Politics 

Auto Mechanics Religion 

Practical Skills Cooking 

Hft Music 



itdthoiit lawscbool 



After just three nrK>nths of study at The 

i\ Institute for Paralegal Training in 
Philadelphia, you can have an exciting and rewarding 
career in law oir business — without law school. 

As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing 
i\ many of the duties traditionally handled 
only by attorneys. And at The Institute for Paralegal 
Training, you can pick one off seven different areas of 
law to stiidy. Upon connpletkm of your training. The 
Institute's unique Placennent Scrvke will find you a 
responsible and challenging job in a law firm, bank or 
corporation in the city ^ your chokre. 

T'he Institute for Paralegal Training is the 
nation's first and most respected school for 
paralegal training. Since 1970. we ve placed oyer 
2,300 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide. 

If you" re a senior of high academic standing 
and looking for an above average career. ^ 
contact your placement ofTice for an interview with 



We wiN vM your campus on: 
Wadwaiday, Dscambar 6 



for 
Paral«9al 

TraMng^ 




235 South 1 7th Street 
PtiilMtejohM. PA 19103 



P0 



ONIGHTI 



_ THE 

QUIET 
MAN 

JOHN WAYNE 

M,ure.„0'HARA 



»1 00 



for 

cation 

istructors^ 
larter J 

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lOlitics 
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5 South i 7th Street 
iladelphia. PA 191(0 
5) 732 6600 



play here this week 



by t(M toimniioaki 




Ravi Shankar it not only the foveiiiost performer of 
clasMeai fitar in the world, but he is also one of ^ wofld's 
best-known musicians. 

The reason Cdt this pofmlarity b that ttm music of Ravi 
Sflankar has a nearly catholk appeal. Everyone from the 
London Symphony Orchestra to tfie half-mlllkm fans at 
Woodstock have been impressed by the virtuoshy of his 
m nsif i aw i hip and m imdeidabla taleiit as a composer. 

Shaakar's M of acoonqilishfkients is a long one. He was 
the only performer to play at thi three most important rock 
festivab, Hie MoiMiaray Pop Festival, Woodstock and the 
Gmcert lor Baagla Desh. He has won a Grammy award as 
the Classical Peiformer of tbt Year. He has worked on two 
film scores, "Father Fanchali" and '^Charly. * He has 
ta^t at U.CX.A., City Cdlege of New York and the 
California In^itate of the Arts. The list is endless. 

Shaakar's iastroment, die sttar, is the most popular 
instrument in India and has existed in its present form for 
over 700 years. Fashioned from a seasoned gourd and 
teakwood, the sitar has six or seven main playing strings 
and 13 qmpathetic, or resonatmg, strings which are 
occasionally strummed. 

Shankar's music, directfy descended from 2,000-year- 
old Hindu hymns, is presented in highly structured forms 
called ragas, which are the basis of all Indian music. 
Largely improvisational and open-ended, ragas are the 
Indian method of illustrating the natural harmony between 
man and nature. 

Performing with Shankar will be the world-renown tabla 
player Alia Rakha in the first show of the Opperman Music 
Hall series. 

Tickets for Ravi Shankar^s performance In the 
Opperman Music Hall, Saturday, Dec. 9, at 8:15 p.m., are 
available at the Central Ticket OfQce. Cost is $5 for 
non-students and $3 for students with ID. Tickets will also 
be available at the door the night of the performance. 

Shankar will also deliver a lecture /discussion on the 
evolution of Indian music and the development of the sitar 
at noon Saturday, Dec. 9, admission is $2 for both students 
and non-atodenta. 



Cheap Thrills 

'^■■■■■■■■■^■■■■■■iiHi^^^HnHHmnmnHBi^HaHB^m 

The University Symphony Orchestra wilt perform 
tonight atB:IS p.m. in Kuby Diamond Anditorhim. Fhflltp 
Spurgeon will conduct and Deborah ^gekvist wttl be the 
fhMe soloist in a concerto by Qurl Nielson. 

Tickets are available at the Ceatnd Ticket Office and will 

be available at Ruby Diamond Box Office before the show 

tonight. Tickets are free to students with ID, $3.50 for 

mm^students and $1.75 for senior citizens. 

♦ a • 

The Leon County Public Library will feature a week of* 
Christmas movies for children beginning today. There will 
be two showings each day — at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. 
Attendence is limited to 200 per showing and 
pre-regisiraiion is required. Call 487-2665 for more 
information. . ' 



Tonight's LPO film will be "The Quiet Man,*' direct 
by John Ford. Tnere will be a single showing at 7:30 p.m. 
and admission is $1. 



Wine 

: Cheese 

la 4itw 

CELLAR 



Monrtay-TfMfrsd»v 9-t 
FrM«v-S«tvraay9-9 

222- 7191 

Tennessee^ 



TAYLOR MADE GIFT PACKAGES 
lOR YOUR MOM AND DAD 

STOP m TO SEE OUR 
SELECTION 




Ravi Shankar 

. . . wMfbe the fkst artist to perform in the Opperman 
Music HaM Series 



FtOfUOA FIAMMAU MofMtey. Ommiw 4. ^m I If 

rSet%y*s 

r 224 L College 222-5405 
Daily Specials 

Monday - Lasagna Dinner 

Tues & Thurs - Cheese or Meat 
Ravioli Dinner 3M 

Wed - Spaghetti and Meatball 

Dinner ^ 

Fri, Sat, and Sunday - Italian 
Combination Dinner 

All specials served vyith homemade 
bread, refreshing salad, plus a 
complimentary glass of wine. 




If 



Mules laden with Blue Maguey pinas on their way to Cufijr^^s La J^fgeifui fianL 



Since 1795 weVe gathered our 



Blue Magueys for Cuervo Gold 



III 



IstiU 



the aentiC way. 

Its the old way. A] 
the best. 

^ M Cmrvo we kmwiMt'^i$ere is only om way to fw#tJb?. , 
Cmrm GoLd perfect The way we've beendaing it fornwre 
than 180 years. 

T^t 's why people stiU nurture our jklds of Blue 
Maguey plants. A nd why m ides are still used to brinp 
these precious plants to our d ist UIery. Rr tradition m stHJL 
the most importxmt mgredient in Cuervo GoUL 

This is what makes Cnervo Gold truly special. Neat, 
on the rocks, with a splash of soda, in a perfect Sunrise or 
MaTT^rita, CuervoGold wiU bring you hax^ktoatime when 
qu4dUy riUed the tvorld, 

Ciierm The Gold standard since 1795. 

CUERVO ESPEgAia TEQUIA flO PROOF IMPORTED AND BOTTlEO 8V # 1978 MEUBlElN. INC.. HARTTONO. COI#f 







11 II 






hi 



I. 

.1 



1^ 



14 / Monday, December 4, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 




Classified Ads 





Minolta 
Sno Brand 
flp«ed 1150 
fuitar lite 
B4-2170 



w-case & sfrolM only 
Ztbra Ktnlio BUm 10 



fMW only m Can 



USED STEREO EQUIPMENT 
MIAM|SS;QUAO 303 POWER AMP 

MARANTZ 7 PR EoAMP 
All 53 WAY SPEAKERS 



Model 21} less cartridge 
^•^A*^70M Htm) CaU 222-3*10 or 



Poverty stricken student mutt seli- 
one set of Volvo carburetors PMO mnl 
Volvos call 30S-2381 . 

UMVEST PRICES IN TOWN 
on drapes, runs, curtains, coucttes« 
dinettes, dressers, beds, desks, books, 
records & lots of other useful 
household items. Tlie Old Fas fc i ow e d 
I Stars 17«3S. Monroe. 224-1434 
K I2-S:30^ Sot l^M, Svn 14:311 



m LOT ON POND 

m country ciub section, \ 

$15,000 

(Oiscounfifyoufcntanrttobuiid solar) 



FOR SALE: TWO MADRIGAL 
DINNER TICKCTS FOR DEC a 
CALI.OAV1SATI 
OOJtBACM. 



ONLY TWO WEEKS OLD 
CALL 2a4«4t AFTER 6;00 

16mm Bolex movie camera, mint 
condition, three lenses-wide,normal, 
tel.rangsNn^tr viowor, S22S.Cotl 

5755202 

CALL 444^40 4 LET THE AUCTION 
SAVE YOUR FEET DURING THE 
HOLIDAY RUSH 




1971 Dodge Van Needs some minor 
work. 644 1483, 224-1479. Or message at 
1430 Stuckty. S1«000 Ask for Jim 

71 TR4 GOOD CONDITION, 
178-4737 

1973 FIAT 128 2 DOORS GOOD 

CONDITION ASK 

PHONE S7S«I» 



1968 VW GREAT COND. 
MECHANICALLY SOUND t. 
DEPENDABLE CALL 222-W43 

1975 Dodge Tradesman 100 van vvood 
panel Int. part. Complete all mat. PS 

air 2950 Call 488 8754 575 9867 Tom 



VW bus for sale, Nif* 
rsbuUt 49 
214-7745 



19n PINTO RUNABOUT 
WILL CARRY YOU ANYWHERE 
AC, luggage rack, $695 
1-997-3431. atlor S call 44fS744 



72 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 
GOOD CONDITION, AIR, AM-FM 
Call 304«»«9 or 878-4247 

TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE 

1975 Vega station wagon in good 

condition new brakes 8i tires. Will not 

axplode if hit from rear. t\AM Call 

OWil>«ti44.4WimWFttoS. 

A fine nrH>tor car - 
878^4400 evenings 



KAWASAKI KE175 1977 1400 MILES 
PERFECT CONDITION INCLU- 
DING 2 HELMETS S500 $7S-W33 

HONDA 500F 1972 Yoshmura cam, 
Kerker headers, K&Ns, Lockhart Oil 
Cooler & Thermostat, Lester Mags, 
Coptm antai tires, luggoga rack. 
Baftar tliBfi IMW • S7S-3901 



AM-FM Stereo set w-tapa, cassatfa ft 
tumtaMa tarond Ajjgr* Jb 2 



Child's Bike, 16" Halffy, 
condition. $». 57^0958. 





Tvvo bdr house near FSU, unfurnished 
kitchen equipped air, fenced yard pets 
ok. $225. ma. pm-mB. M o nt lc all O' 
evenings. 

SUBLET 1BRM. START JAN 1. 
CLOSE TO FSU S1S0. AAONTH CALL 
214 1724 ANYTIME 

Sublet Ig 1 bdrm apt $160 mo. Start 
mU-Dec. Keep my $100 deposit 
«• laundry. 1 Mock fr FSU. 224-4327 



Sublet 1 bdrm fMrn apt at Colony 
CM>I Pool, luxury appliances, 
coll2ie«9i32. 



Responsible female roomimata 
naadsd to shara 2br unlumistiad apt 
WjMma at Mission Ridge Apts. Si 
wposit, $125. per month which 
includes utilities. Come by Apt 144 or 
call 878-5024. Also roomnr>ate needed 
for 2 br trailer in quiet neighbortioatf 
near TaHahassae sporlT™^^ 
ORPpsIt tPO per monMi 
wtilities. Call 878-5024 



arona SS9 



L^rge 1 bdrm. turn. 3 biks. from FSU 
$155 inci. cable TV and garttaoe 



Large turn, studio apt. $135. month 
includes caMe and garbage collection. 
Ownwroody Apartments, 405 Dun- 
woody St. Res. manager 22MS05, or 
38S-99i2. Sorry, no pets. 

APT. FOR RENT - Lg 1 BR $14S-mo. 
CaMa TV-AC, vary dose to campus 
fura. Awail. Dac. Call 224-100 9: 

TAKE OVER CONTRACT AT CASH 
HALL SAVE $50 ALL MEALS, 
MAID, POOL. CALL 222 1931. 

ROOMMATE WANTED: FEMALE 
GRAD STUDENT TO SHARE 2 Ml 

FURN DUPL.$75 MO + VjUTIL. 
AVAIL. MID DEC. 224-3698 

1 bdrm furnished apt. walk to FSU 
Quiet and priv«ta^7S JncMides all 
utilities. 224-0904 

Sublet 2 br. ^t. starting Jan. 1 - June. 
20S - montfi. Hiclwdos wator. sawar & 
cable. Fully carpatsd, central heat & 
air, dishwasher, dispiasal, pool. Low 
iitilitiot. CaH STS-iiW. Susan or Ellen. 

Sublet one bedroom furnished 
apartmaRt Jan. \ 1079 in Tallahassee 
VHIage 2841 W. Pensacola. Come by 
apt. 14 after noon. 

HELP! Sublet my gigantic 1 br apt. 
Take over lease Dec. 5 until June. 
Gold carpet, dishwasher, disposal, 
central air-heat. Pool, sauna 8i 
laundry room. Walking distance to 
FSU. UHls. awaraoa m. Unfurnished 
Call 575-743S or iOMVS OviW 

i^^^ i?9?9^ FURNISHED 
PLAZA FOR WHITER 
QUARTER. CALL 222 2752. 

In 1 bdr turn apt at Regency Park 3 
Wksfrom FSU. Pool, tennis cts, cable 
Ind. 19S mo 222-7900 (F-16) 

Takeover contract at Osceola Hall all 
maals maid service pool sauna TV for 
mere mte call Wsndy 2243115 

SUBLET: PRINCE AAANOR APTS. 
2 bdrm, unfum, pool, laiMBry, waNt la 

FSU. Call 575 3056. 

looking to upgrade your living condi- 
tions? Here's your chance. Quaint 1 
bedroom apt on Collega Ave. $12S- 
monNi CoU Qardon-m-fTl^ aftar 4 

2 bedroom house near FSU, 
unfuroiihad kitchen equipped, fancad 
yard, pets ok $225 ma. l-Oif.l|ll 

Monteceilo evenings 

SUBLET STUDIO APT 190 MO mCL. 
UTIL. CALL 224-6028 

OSCEOLA HALL CONTRACT 

19 MEALS MAID SERVICE POOL 

SUBLET CALL ROBBIE 2224471 

^IS^? ^^^^ HOUSE UNFURN. 
B I G BACK Y AR D AVAIL OCC IS 8190 
CALL S7J88a AFTER 5. 



SUBLET OSCEOLA HALL FOR 2 

MorF POOL. SAUNA, FOOD, PAR- 
TIES CALL ANYTIME 222-6659. 

SUBLEASE STUDIO APT 190mo 
incls.utHs. Walking distance from 
FSU Call 224-4028 Call noar and gat a. 

special discount 

SUBLET STUDIOAPT$145A40.LOW 
UTIL 1 BLK FR COL. OF BUS. VERY 

QUIET 222-4445 

OSCEOLA HALL CONTRACT 

19 MEALS SAUNA POOL SUBLET 

CALL J0t«l 2284471 



ROOMAAATE NEEDED NICE LOC. 
NEAR SCHOOL MUST BE NEAT 
CALL SCOTT 575 5441, EVE.. 

Wanted person interested in ptiotoira- 
phy to help in a OkJ Time. Ptioto 
business, some travel necsooarvGMI 

Charles after 5 at 576 1724 

Non s moke f rm mt to share 2 bdrm 
apt in downtown area. Prefer serious 

student wtx) gets craiy occasionally to 
preserve sanity. 224-8574 Susanne 

F RMMT OWN ROOM $70 MO. 1-3 
UTIL. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. 5744334. 




IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! 
Send $1.00 for your 256-page, mail 
order catalog of Collegiate Research. 
10,250 topics Hsted. Prompt Delivery. 
Box 25907-B, Loo A n g a l aa , CaHf. Mns 

(213) 477-8224. 

SUNNY DAY NURSERY SCHOOL 
Naar FSU. Cartif isd Teachers. 
Hours 7;3»i;38. Call 877-0834 

AFFLIAMCBIIIFAIII 

Service on all mafor afipliances, air 
conditioning and heating. Sales- 
reconditioned units with 90 day 
warranty. Call Marshall, days 
599-7879 (pockat bas psr ) 
EvaninB 888 8888, LIC8NSED 



Mature independent female to 

nrMdern 3 bdrm 2 bath house. Ito pot 
but otherwise liberal. 384-4745 
evenings. $185 1 



Unquestionably ttie ultimata in 

student iKMising! Spacious, conven- 
ient Ibr aprt. */} block from campus on 
College Ave. $135-month available 
immediately or sooner Call 222 9787 or 
444-5505 and ask for Sid 

Female to share 2brm apt iVj miles 
from campus. Non smkr preferred. 
222-4517 90 per mo -1- W electric. 



Fm rmmtwaiitad. Start Dec or Jan in 
I bdrm Rsg. Pk. Apt. S95 a mo, util 
frnodaposit. CaH Cathy 224-3450 

Fm rmmt beg wtr.qrt ibdrm iblock to 
FSU 774B + W aWIS. caB 224-2513 

nights. 

Male Rmt Needed for 2 bdrm fum apt. 
WSiS qh-. 2 poofs <Mina tennis 8i 

racquetball crt own rm Oi bth 110 -f 
dep Oi V3 util Si ph. Call 575 7136 Donny 
Location 1 mile from campus 

FM RMMT LONGLEAF APT 

$43.75-i-'AUTIL 
CALL 576-1540 

Need immediately! Female roomate 
to st^re 2t)drm apt can have own 
room $80 mo and 1-3iiNt waN( to 
FSU224-0397. 

Rm mate needed Jan 1st with 2 brad 
Students 3bdrm 2bath 75.00 mo. -i-l-S 
utilities. 85.00 deposit Call Malt 
304-7869anytime Hartsfield Rd. 

FM RMMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM APT 
W-3 OTHER GIRLS $61-»-V4 ULT 
NEAR FSU CALL 574-5984 

FEM RMMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM 
APT. V^RT A UTIL REGENCY PK 
APTS AVAIL. DEC 15 224-9113 

TALENT NIGHT AT J J ZACKARY'S 

$50 $20 $10 PRIZES 
Anyoneintereslad must audition Wad. 
2-4pm W. Tenn. St. 

Male roommate needed to share apt 
for winter quarter Plaza Apts-walk to 
campus $90-i- '/Expenses Call 222-2448 

» YSHVS-H'^E TO PURCHASE A 
TtdCETTOTHE RUSSIAN BALLET 
FtU BOX NO. U 6419 

PERSON TO SUBLET 2 BDRM 
FURN APT OVER-LOOKING POOL 
AT PLAZA APTS. PLEASE CON 
TACT Ranniar Qaorga 222-1359 

M or FM rmt n s a d e d to share 2 bdrm 
apt as of Jan 1 own room $100 -i- 1-3 
util Spanish Town Apts 5752151 

ROOMMATE 2 BEDROOM APT 
CLOSE TO FSU % RENT -I- UTIL 
A^E IN DEC OR WTVt fyia84 

A^LE ROOAAMATE NEEDED FOR 
WINTER IBR. 84 -I- 16ULT. CALL 
ANDY 2249588 1 BLOCK FSU 

rPSct'^^^^ 2 BEDROOM APT 
CLOSE TO FSU RENT-fUTIL 

MOVE IN DEC OR wrvTss ml 

Fm rmt wanted in Plaza Apt Two 
great nonsnrMking grad shidents 91 
monthly A 1.3 iMmiss. CON 2M«n 
Yvonne 



SO CU.FT.SCUBA TWIN TANKS 
WITH BACK PACK CALL PATTY 
WK 877-9033 HM. 222-1944 



MOTOR DRIVE FOR CANON F-1 IN 

GOOD CONDITION PAY CASH 
CALL 2248045 OR 644-5505 ASK FOR 
JONATHAN 



$50 per 100 envelopes stuffed and 
addressed at home. Wtite Banco 
tmamnmiiinmnm. 



PART TIME EVENINGS. 4-9p.m. 
3 nights. Car nacassary. CaU 234-2518. 
Mpjn. i>88n^rt. 

FREE ROOM, BOARD, SMALL 
SALARY In exchange for infant care. 
Must be experienced, non smokar. 
Flexible schedule, but must have at 
least three weekdays free. Car 
raquirad. CaH 385-7481 

Extra hours earn you $500. per 1000 
Stuffing envelopes with our circulars. 
For mfo: writa SliS Entarprisa Dept. 
106 PO BOK 115B MMdIetown, Ohto 




FREE MICHEL08 OOAFT 
FOR LAOIC8 

3 4 PM 
8 - ? PM 

POOR PAUL*S POURMOilsa 
MY ARM IS THE 8 e$T 

ANYONE WISHING TO Obt*... 
CIRCLE OF GOLD CALL 

DEAR L. FIFI FRtlMBT, 

How's your sweet A taw 
Keep nr»e informed' 
You'll never 
Guess Who 

DEAR CAPTAIN SOUIHT, 
YOU ARE THE APPLE OF MY 
EYE. HOW ABOUT A BITE> 
LOVE ALWAYS, GUESS 




DEAREST DINK, JUST REMBS. 
BER. NO MATTER HOW t SPEu 
YOUR NAME YOU'RE STill iS 
BUDDIE! LOVE GUESS WHO 



Experienced waitresses needed Ic 
work lunch shift at axcluslva new 

res+aurant 386 4S4y 




English teacher will type, proof A adit 
papers, thesis A dissertations, exp. 
Call Becky 877-5715 please leave 



Typing -quick, quality, 70c dbl spc pg 
Edit & rewrite at negotiable rates 
Kym Gross 224-4375 days 

STUDENTS! LET'S TALK BOOKS 
IMPROVE READING SKILLS! 
TUTORING PROGRAMS 
ELEMENTARY-JUNIOR-SENIOR 

BEGINNING JANUARY SrtfJf 
CALL 574-7522 or 878-1404 

HOUSE PAINTINO 
WALLCOVMNNO 
PRESSURE WASHING 
^ •SfriScwl A reasonable 
Call Jaff 224-7745 far astimata 

££. typist-IBM carracting 

seiac.-papars, iffsoart.« jnas. UnlB 
DurMn 574-1988 ' •-••^ 

Typing: experienced professional 
secretary with IBM self correcting 
typewriter 75c to 1.00 per page CaB 
893-4524. Special rates avaitabla. 

I STRING TENNIS RACQUETS 
One day service. Lowest prices in 
CallBiHat. 



Keep in tune 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNING 
RESTORATION, MOVINGS, 
* ESTIAAATES 



F rmmt needed starting Dec. 15 Fum 
apt abtocks from cam. $110 mo. plus 
util 



AAALE RMMT TO SHARE 
? BDRM APT AT PLAZA CALL 
DAN 222-3541 

F RM NEEDED FOR WINT 8. SPR 
QURT'S IN 2 BEDROOM FURN APT 
WALKIN DIST TO CAMPUS CALL 
IMMEDIATELY 222 2223. 



Typing — an sorts — reasonable — 
correcting typewriter — transcripts 
of tapes. Reliable. Call 576-5915 9 to 5. 

I DO CHAIR WEAVING AND 
CANING. Good references, reason- 
able rates. Call Rhonda around 4 
evenings. 224-0312. 



Jazz md Contemporary styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 
Jim CfoHar 2244)534 



Leon Caonty Food Co-op is accepting 
resumes for the position of coordina- 
tor. Applications accepted Nov. 28 to 
Dec. 12. Those with the five highest 
ratings will be contacted for an 
interview to take place on Dec. 17. A 
decision will be reached by the 18th. 
Salaried position based an 38 hours 
per weak; haafib insuranca* and 2 
waaks paid vacation. Additional Info 
may ba abtainad at LCFC storefront. 

oi'lRSEAS JOBS — Summer-full 
time. Eurofje, S. America, Aush-alia, 
Asia, etc. All fields, 8500-1200 
monthly, expanses pakf, sightseeing. 
Free info — Write: International Job 
<>nter. Box 4490 FB Berkeley, CA 



Howard Johnson's Restaurant Rum 
. Kag LounBe Budwaisar draft 50c 
5-7p.m. Mon.-Sat . 

MED. PIZZA $1.75 AT THE PUB 1312 
W. TENN. ST. 11am-6pm MONDAYS 

NEED INFORMATION 

Anyone witnessing or having any 
information concerning the Iranian 
demostration of Nov. 15 please coma 
to room 344 of tha union Wad. Dac 4 
b et w een lOa.m. and Ipjn. 
ED HARVEY 

Office of the Public Dafandor 

For Abortions, pregnancy screening, 
birth conhttf or health info, call tha 
Famtotsrwiomen's Health Camsr ' 
214-0488 

KICKOFF MONDAY'S WITH FREE 
POOL FOR LADIES, ORIfllC BUSCH 

Duval 

Did you know as a full-time FSU 
student you are entitled to free legal 
advise. For details call 644-1811 or 
come by 312 Unkm. Student 
Sarvicos, spiMi By yotr S.6. 

Free Micheldb Draft for ladles 

day from 3-4 and 8-9p.m. POOR 
PAULS POURHOUSE next to 



ALL GIRLS INTERESTED IN 
WINTER RUSH, SIGN UP This 
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COURTYARD OR AT 322 UNIOk 

TO MY LITTLE SWEETIE, 
"HAPPY BIRTHDAY BENZ" 
YOU'RE A BIG GIRL NOW! 
HAVE A GREAT DAY!! 



NCLFI NEED RIDE TO TAMPA 

or nearby city. Dec. 8 or 9 v» 
with gas. Call Laura 224-2768 

WE TAKE THE TIME TO BO IT 
RIGHT. Headquarters has hCMM, 
perms and great haircuts. He«kMr- 
ters 2017 W. Pimacoia St. SlfW i. 

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fairly good looking, athletic. gaiNt. 
liberated - seeks relationship wM 
itible famala. David. PO ^ 



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Prizes every Mon. at 7:30pm 

POOR PAUL'S POURHOUSE next to 



Jerry-Happy 18th. Sorry Ifs Kk. 
Want some bologna? Didn't knoe 
^hObWJjilridJLL^^ 

I've got a problem I cant quit smoking 
pot if you want to quit lets do it 
together write P.O. box 5902 it caiM 
work leave name and address. 

XA4AS BREAK HAIRCUT 
Come see us for that special haircut 
you need for the holidays JO'S FOB 
HAIR 222-1112 1020 N.Monroe 



PREGNANT? 
TAPPS Offers free test and 

problem pregnancies. 222-7177 

9:3O-11:30AM, TTH 4 8PM 



hdp Is 



Experienced typist requires financial 
assistance via typing in my home. All 
types Of typing, including theses, and 
scientific papers. PTin nsgot. Phona 
38SMS3 anytlfna, 38S1392 days 

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the difficult we do immediatly, ttre 
impossible takes a little longer. We're 
the ones to see if you've got — — 
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Complala Hairstyling.WaoB* cond. 
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balance perms Henna's 
neutral or color short hair or 
for long hair. All work by 
students under suparvision af quali- 
fied instructors. TaM. College of 
Barber Styling. 1221 Appalachee 
Pkwy. Call 877-3020 for appt. Closed 



APPLIANCES 

Will buy and-or haul off your 
appliances. Call Marshall days 
599-7879 (pocket baspar) wm^m 
870-S024 LICENSED 

COLLEGIATE STUD MODELS 
Wanted for Playgirl type photos. 
Photos made in your area. Write: 
Photo N0.548, 254 S. RobortooB mmi^ 
Beverly Hills, Ca. 90211. 

EVERYBODY'S DOING IT. 
Looking good and saving money at 
JO'S FOm NAm 2IMII2 1888 N. 
Monroe 

FSU SPECTRUM IS FILLING 
SF>OTS FOR WINTER QUARTER. 
ANY BAND THAT PLAYS ANY 
ORIGINAL TUNES NOW IS YOUR 
CHANCE TO GET ON TELEVISION 
FSU SPECTRUM CALL22£S9n ASK 
FOR ISAAC ASST PRODUCER 

ASTROLOGICAL CONS ULTATIONS 
Self -dOvalopmcnt, compatabil ity , per- 

sonality patterns, career aptitude, 
children. Thorough, professional 
OM/nseiing at reasonabia rates. 
Fred McDonald, M.S. 
P.O. Box 20374 

Tailahassaa, 32304 

iAMAACULATE TYPING I'm so 
broke I'm livin' in a tent with nothin' 
to eat; I got holes in my shoes and 
can't afford booze. But i don't want 
your sympathy, just your typing 
business. s.7S-paga. Contact Oamii at 
the Flambeau offlca. 

■W i l li 11 Mip il . I ll in I I II 



LOST: SILVER FRAME EYE 
GLASSES IN A BROWN CASE. SB 
REWARD. CALL 4444»9t _ 

FOUND: 14kt. GOLD FILLED 
NECKLACE ON INTRAMURAL$ 
FIEL D. CALL PEGGY 224.4157. 

LOST: Husky-shep mhi dog. He's 7 

mos old, fight colored witti husky 
markings on his face. Was wear ng « 
red coHar with tag. Reward 2243896 



Found: at FSU-Gville game gold ring 
laithdiareancttcall 5738853 afters. . 

LOST REWARD IRISH SETTER 5 
MO. OLD-BLACK COLLAR APAL. 
PKWV. AReA877*3H4 



Lost Wed. in union 
umbrella, if found, 
VOry imp.! 



red foMing 
please csii 




It's GaI 
At 7 p. 
temin pl.t 
gBine ru 
victory ov| 

SBtllfdBV 

Seminole 
Flond.il 
TbIIbHas! 

top scor( 

BCCUTBtc (I 

the Gator 

single \os\ 
FSU a tic 

FSU col 
rivalry usj 
than emo| 

•This 
game." si 
for the sal 
Miami : 
tournam< 

The sti 




Bi 
Pi 
Be 
He 
U 
Fr 



Hgpin^i m'' 'IT" p"i 




Fi OfllfIA Fi AiMiff 4i I iiiMteif 



/ 16 



S ports 

Florida Gators invade 
Tully to tangle with 
Lady Seminoles tonight 

by gerald enstey 

flambeau sports writ*r 

It's Gator Gigging time, again. 

At 7 p.m. in Tully Gym. the FSU women's basketball 
team plays traditional rival Florida, completing a three 
game run of contests against Sunshine State teams. A 
victory over Stetson, 73-59, last Wednesday, coupled with 
Saturday's defeat of South Florida, 89-80, leaves the 
Seminoles 4-2 on the season. 

Florida, 2-1, brings a talented, well-cbached team to 
Tallahassee. Led by 6-foot Quintella Bonner, last year's 
top scorer and rebounder, and Doreen Landolfi, an 
accurate outside shooter who was injured most of last year, 
the Gators have defeated Georgia and Auburn. Florida's 
single loss came at the hands of Mercer, who also handed 
FSU a defeat two weeks ago. 

FSU coach Diane Murphy, anticipating the tntensky this 
rivalry usaally entaili, labels i^B a trig game^ but for more 
than emotioBal reasons. 

**This is an important game because it is a conference 
game," said Mlitphy. "We ate co n cerne d with this game 
for the same reasons as we worry about Soutii FhMrida and 
Miami; we want to get the first-seed spot in tke state 
tournament** 

The state tDomament, played F^. ^Q-^^Lakeland, 
involves only the four miqor sdiods 
season records against eadi other mHHpsis for 
seeding. With state tommey play ^ basis for 
advancement to the regional tournaments (the top two 
teams advance), coaches have reason to want the best 

possible position in the toumi^nent. 

Saturday's victory over South Florida in Tully Gym was 
a perfect illustration of another of Murphy's concerns 
about this year's team. Though the Seminoles won, they 
did so only on the basi*; of a well-played first half, which 
saw them leading 47-30. The second half was a sloppy, 
foul-marred disaster that made the score close. In other 
games this year, most notably those games against South 
Alabama and Mercer, FSU has played poorly in one half 
and magnificently in the other. 

**! think that the reasons for our inconsistency have been 
inexperience and lack of concentration," said Murphy. 
"We have eleven freshmen and, though I've been very 
pleased with them overall, I think it's tough to get 
freshmen psychologically ready to play two good halves." 

"Personally, I think we should be 6-0," Murphy added. 
"But our inexperience has hurt us. When we finally put 
two good halves of basketball together we are going to be 
excellent." 

After tonight's game the Lady Seminoles embark on a 
road trip that includes stops in New Orleans, Memphis, 
and Birmingham. FSU's next home game is Jan. 4 against 



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PrMk Comicer High Times 



Weekly- Christmos Specials; 




Broken Player photobrsnyiintoky 

. . . FSU basketbah star Mckey DiKard\22\ wUba 
reieasedfromTaMahasseeMemoMReghiwt 
Medical Center either today or Tuasttoy. Dittard 
broke his leg in a coKisiori at practice FrMay and 
be out of action the rest of the season. However, 
the iunk)rwW have two years of eligibility Mt when 
he returns next year. 




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if.. 



16 / Monday, December 4, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



FAMU opens playoffs against Jackson State 



from wire and staff reports 
MISSION. Kaa. (UPl) — Florida A & M 

was chosen Sunday to comf^te the 

semifiiial fpamigs in the NCAA DIvism I 

football champioBshtp. 
The rattkn, Hce Ja^m 

(Miss.) State, lOso 10-1, m Jacksoa. Nevate 

Reno (1 1-0) w9l host Massachttsetts, #-3^, 

on Dec. 9. 
The winners will advance to the 

championship game on Dec. 16 in the 



Pioneer Bowl at Wichita Falls, Texas. 

However, all news was not good for the 
Rattlers as they learned that leading rusher 
ike Wiltiams was lost for the rest of the 
season. Tailha^ WIlHams, who rushed for 
162 yards Saturday against Gramhling 
suffered a fourth quarter injury that w|is 
originally diagnosed as a fractured «i|de. 
X-rays tal^ Sunday, however, coofimied 
the presence of a complete hreak of the tfi>ta 
(shin bone). 



FAMU coach Rudy Hubbard expressed 
disappointment over the loss of Williams, 
who established a new FAMU record for 
yardage in a season. Saturday's 
performance gave Williams 1,274 yards for 
the season. Williams had gmie past the old 
record of 881 yards in a season, set by 
James Rackely ('74), two weeks Ago versus 
Alabama A AM. Hubbtfd said he iotiads. 
to replace W^ams wkh junior Meh^ 
McFaydem. 




Rudy Hubbard 



gams pUiyoff berth but hm 



Dolphin defense stifles 
slumping Redskins, 16-0 



WASHINGTON (UPI) — Bob Griese fired a 40-yard 
touchdown pass to Jimmy Cefalo and Garo Yepremian 
kicked three field goals to support a spectacular Miami 
defensive effort Sunday as the Dolphins defeated 
Washington 16-0, handing the slumping Redskins their 
first shutout in seven seasons. 

Miami, 9-5, kept alive its chances for an AFC wild card 
playoff berth while Washington, 8-6, saw its playoff hopes 
dampened. The Redskins, winners of only two of their last 
eight games, are in a battle with four other teams for an 
NFC wild card spot. 

The Redskins had not been held scoreless since Nov. 21 , 
1971, when the Dallas Cowboys shut them out 13-0. The 
loss' was the third straight for the Redskins, who had not 
lost three in a row since 1970. 

Griese, who completed 14-of-27 for 170 yards, went to 
the air only when necessary as the Dolphins hammered out 
IbO yards on the gtaimd through the middle of the 
Redskin's defense. . 

The Dolphins' touchdown came when they marched 94 
yards in nine plays, foUowing the second-half kickoff. 
Griese sparked the (hrtve, passing 27 yards to Nat Moore 
for a first down at the Wadkngton 41 . Three plays later, he 
hit Cefolo at the goaf line between d^en^fiers Jack Scott 
and Gerald WSMams. 

Yepremian, who Mck^ two field goals for a 6-0 halftime 

lead, added his 12th stra^ht field goal over the last seven 
games in the third quarter. 

Miami safety Ttm Foley set up Yepremian's third field 
goal, intercepting Redskin quarterback Joe Theismann. at 
the Washington 30r Theismann, who completed only 
12-0f-28 passes for J 77 yards, threw the third <rf his four 
interceptions just one play after Scott^s seventh 
interception of the year stalled a Dolphin drive at the 30. 
Yepremian 's field goal came from 39 yards. 



Sports In Brief 



There will be an important meeting of fraternity 
managers today at 4 p.m. in Room 214 Tully. 



Field 1 
Field 2 
Field 3 

Field 1 

Field 2 
Field 3 

Field 1 

Field 2 
Field 3 



4:00 

F-Troop vs. Bomb Squad 
Cosmic Cowboys vs. Cone & Company 
' Dorm Winners Championship 
5:00 

Winner-Roper Wndrs./H. City Honchos 
vs. Winner-D&I Sports/ Sailors 
Lost Cause vs. Winner-BMFF/The Force 

Pig Dogs vs. Raiders 

6:00 

Winner-Up in Smoke/ Pink Panthers vs. 
Winaer-Mex. Killer Bees/Ground Beef 
Dorm Losers Championship 
Winner-Bullheads/ Bozons vs. 
Winner-Osceola 8/Bayou Bangers 




Pil;ti Brewer, FSU Senior ^ 

Tbn^t's the ^ 

For You: 

A free Seminole T- Shirt like the one shown above. You can pick one up on Monday nights after 
5 p.ni. when you buy any mectttmi or liMrge SuperStyle pizza (Ow 

SuperStyleptrrchased). Offer is good now throiigh Decern 1978 at the four Pizza Hut 
restaurants in Tallahassee. 

For FSU: 

Pizza Hut will donate 25<t to the Florida State University Athletic Association for each medium or 
large SuperStyle pizza sold on Monday nights during the promotion penod. (Four Pizza Hut 
restaurants in Gainesville will also be making a donation to the University of Florida Athletic 
Association based on this same method.) The total donation to each University will be announced 
December 6th. 

New SnporStjrle FiuM 

The name says it all. Now when you choose your favorite pizza 
combination, just say "SuperStyle. Savor a pizza that s piled high 
with extra cheese and the toppings you like best More tasty than 
any pizza you ve tried. And more for the money toa Let yourself go 
...SuperStyle. 




Four Tallahassee locations: 

1 71 0 W. Tennessee St. 1 24 1 E. Lafayette St. 
222-9024 878^1124 



2011 N. Monroe St. 
386-7636 



3470 Thomasville Rd. 
386-3617 



Union accuses business dean of merit raise improprieties 



The dean of the FSU College of Business 
violated several provisions of the faculty's 
collective bargaining agreement, the United 
Faculty of Florida charged concerning a 
grievance filed yesterday. 

Marketing professor and union member 
Bruce Gunn filed the grievance, which cites 
Ray Solomon, dean of the College of 
Business, for failing to use a standard 
procedure to determine faculty merit raises 
and refusing to provide information to Gunn 
on how his merit raise was determined. 

**Dr. Gunn has received high peer ratings 
for teaching, research and service while at 
FSU " said Harold Fletcher, president of 



the FSU chapter of UFF. "But even during 
one of his most productive years (1977) lie 
was granted no pay raise " 

The contract between the union and the 
university system allows grievance* to be 
filed on questions of merit raises onlv if 
improper evaluation procedures might have 
been used, according to union officials. 

Union representatives met with Lillian 
Mohr. an assistant to mttversity president 
Bernard Sliger. for nearly five boitrs 
yesterday, presenting five witnesses and 
documents supporting the charges. 

"In my opinion this is an in-house 
matter/' said Mohr. '*There were a great 
deal of facts presented today and more time 
is needed to digest them.*' She refused 



further comment on the matters. 

The administration must make a decision 
based on yesterday's informal hearing 
within 20 days, at which time Gunn will 
decide if he is satisfied with the ruling or if 
he will ai»peal it to the Board of Regents. 

Soloman said i» Mb the mmt mm't 
n ewswo rt h y. 

*'lt's just a man upset about his merit 
raise," he said. "But if you check the 
records of the professors invoK ed with this 
thing, you'll see that they're not the top 
faculty." 

Union officials said they feel the issue is a 
serious one that could lead to the dtsriosafe 
of other abuses in the business college. 



"TlHce business school faculty have 
stepped forward to testify on this 
grievance." Fletcher said. "The union has 
given the faculty a way In apeak out ag^Mt 
the administration." 

Both Gunn and other parties involved in 
the grievance have been — w iMi^ to 
co nu n cnt on the detaib wumtMnm , the 



Gunn. who came to FSU in 1973. wM 
only that he was concerned about the 
outcome of the grievance. 

"This is the most serious Mtler I have 
ever been involved in in ny career." he 

said. "1 filed the grievaaoehecaaioli 
odier . recoofse. ** 



Tuesday 

December 5, 1978 




Serving TaUahmee for 66 yean 



Fell new UF coach 

University of Florida President Robert 
Marston announced yesterday that 
Charley Pell, head coach of the Gatt^r 
Bowl-bound Clemson Tigers, will succerd 
Doug Dickey as I F head tcxnball coach. 
Pell, who compiled an 18-4-1 record in 
two years at Clemson. met with Marston 
yesterday at the Greenville Spartanburg. 
S.C Jetport where the decision was 
announced. See story page 8. 



Delay of executions 
granted Utah pair 



by peter gillins 

unittd press intenMtioiial 

SALT LAKE CITY — The Utah Supreme 
Court yesterday stayed the executions of 
convicted kiliers Dale S. Pierre and William 
A. Andrews, who had been scheduled to 
face a ftring squad Thursday. 

The judges issued the indefinitie stay 
after a 90 minute heariiig aad ahout JS 
minutes deMberation. 

Chief Justice ARwrt H. Ellett Assented 
saying he thought the appeal, the second lo 
the state's high court by the two killers, 
*'seenBlebe solely^fiDrtiie purpose of dday 
and the Irastration of ju^ice." 

The other judges issued «i entry into 
rainntes orderii^ the case sent back to 
Third District Judge James Smya for 
another appeal hearing. 

Gilbert Athay and Tm ¥atd, kwyers for 
Pierre and Andrews, argued that Utah's 
death penalty law discriminaled against 
blacks and poor people. 

The U.S. Supreme Court previous^ 
refused to review the case of Pierre and 
Andrews, who were convicted of nrardcring 
three people in the robbery of an OgdeU, 
Utah, stereo component store. 

Athay said Utah's death penalty law had 
been applied arbitrarily and capriciously. 
He recalled a recent case in which two white 
men were allowed to plead guilty to second 
degree murder for the death of two French 
tourists so they could escape the death 
penalty. 

"No such offer was made in this case 
because the defendants were black and 
were poor and because their victims were 
white, prominent, respected citizens of the 
Stote of Utah." Athay said. 



Ford echoed that argument and charged 
that the trial judge had refused to declare a 
mistrial after it was discovered someone 
had slipped a note to the jurors. The note 
said, **Hang the niggers." 

The racial charges brought a curt reply 
from Chief Justice Albert H. Ellett who told 
Ford, **Let me enlighten you. Only one 
colored man has ever been executed in 
Utah; that was when this n.intry was a 
territory. Not one has been executed since 

statehood." 

The defense lawyers also argued that the 
stays should be granted and the case should 
be reopened because four recent U.S. 
Supreme Court decisions on death penalties 
had been handed down since the original 
trial. They claim that those rulings should 
now be considered. 

The lawyers said they would argue that 
executicMi by a Utah State Prison firing 
squad was cruel aad painful and should be 
outlawed. 

Utah is the only state which uses shooting 
as a method of execution, but convicted 
killers arc also given the choice of hanging. 

Utah Attorney General Robert Hansen 
argued that the defense had raised no nfw 
argimmts or appeals which had not been 
decided or could not have been raised 
earlier. He accused them of trying to 
deliberately deii^ jntke. 

Pierre, 2S, a native of Trinidad and a 
IbrMr ic^dent of Brooklyn, N.Y., and 
Andrews, 24. Jwiesboto, La., were Air 

when' the torture 
81' f974« The ttvee 
murder victims and two oiiets were forced 
by the robbers to droik a caustic drain 
deaaer. then shot. 




Legislative hangers-on 



. . . Florida House Speaker Hyatt Brown leads Reps. Ralph Haben and a sagging 
Dick BatcMof over the Myers Park fiafcours in yesterday's Legislative Fun Run. For 



2 / Tueiday, Decembor 5, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 





i I I 



ay give FSU money 



to fight axing of civic center auditorium 



Chris brockfiMMi 



Over the put weekend, Student Govenmieiit FteM&A 
HetH Friedmtn spent 16 homs in meetings widi t«ro 
orfftn^stkMis and emerged from Hie melee with two 
political vidorles lor FSU. 

Flriecknan was elected vice diairperson of the Stale 
OnucO <tf Stadent Body Presidents and elicited tiie 
council's promise to help in FSU's fight over the amended 
civic center contract. 

The councU is composed of only eight student body 
presidents since the University of Florida withdrew from 
the group last year. Its members, meeting in Tampa, 
promised to push resolutions through their student 
governments in support of Florida Student Association and 
FSU student government efforts to investigate the civic 
center situation, said Friedman. 

*The SG presidents also promised to attempt to procure 
$250 per student government to finance money needed in 
FSU's efforts to obtain legal advice and possible legal 
actions," said Friedman. 

**A11 the student governments think if the Board of 
Regents and the state can totally ignore a state resolution 
concerning SG approval of the use of Activity and Services 
fee money, then every university in the system is getting 
slapped in the face," Friedman said. 

He was referring to a< student fee resolution passed by 
tile legislature last year requirmg prior;: student 
government approval of mmy cont^ entered into by the 



BOR wludi uses stnd^ IwfldiDg fees. 

Although the civic center agreement was sigaed by the 
city, county. BOR and FSU in 1976, before the law took 
effioct, recent changes in the center have created a new 
eootract requhing Friedman's approval, tlie students 
omitend. 

FSU's student government is battling civic center 
contract changes that eUminated a 2,200-seat auditorium 
and a 1,000-car parking garage, and increased the 
construction cost from $24 million to $33.2 million. 

The Council of Student Body Presidents is also 
considering asking the Regents and the legislature to 
include money in their overall education budgets for a 
Center of Excellence on Energy, with an emphasis on solar 
energy. 

**We recognize the importance of Florida's energy 
needs," Friedman « said. "And when tiiey do set a 
center of exceHelice we don't want to see all the moii^ 
spent on nuclear energy research. We want the emphasis 
to be on solar energy and other alternate forms of 
energy." 

The Florida Student Association's board of directors is 
composed of the student government presidents. The met 
with Regents Chairperson James Gardener, who told them 
commitment of his interest in university financial aid 
programs. Gardener also requested that the student 
governments send him their findiags on finaadal aid 
problems. 



Student beaned with chair after squabble 



by susan waller 

flambeau writer 

An FSU law student was hit over the head and back with 
a chair Wednesday night by a local resident in a dispute 
over the use of a law school telephone. 

Chuck Moore, a 34-year-old law student, was waiting to 
use the free phone in the student lounge in B.K. Roberts 
Hall at approximately 9:20 p.m. last Wednesday. 

Scott Evan Paul, 18, of Tallahassee, was charged with 
aggravated battery in the incident when apprehended the 
next day. The snspect allegedly had been on the plxme for 
a long time and had refused to let Moore use it. 

When Paul relinquished the phone and Moore began his 
caH, Paul allegedly- hit Moore over the head-a&d back with 
a wooden chair. 



Moore fell to the ground and Paul fled the scene, 
according to witnesses. Moore, though suffering from cuts 
and bruises, was able to pursue Paul, and chased him 
down Jefferson Street before losing him in the parking lot 
of the Jefferson Arms apartment building, 412 West 
Jefferson Street. 

Moore was taken to the FSU Health Center and treated 
for superficial cuts and bruises and released. 

FSU police apprehended the suspect at approximately 
6:45 p.m. at his Jefferson Arms apartment. 

Moore refused comment on the incident, saying only he 
plans to take the case to court. 

This is not the first time trouble has arisen from 
outsider's use of the free telephone in the student lounge, 
say other law students. 



FLORIDA 
VS 

FLORIDA STATE 
BASKETBALL 

JACKSONVILLE COUiSEUM 
SAT. DEC 9 AT 8 PM 

TICKETS AVAIUBU AT TUUT 
GYM TKRET OffKE 

for FSU STUDEN1S 

HURRY! 



Army-Novy Store 

CLOTHING* 

538 West Teim. St. 224-7845 

:iE US FOR YOUR 
CHRISTMAS 

SHOPPING 



SPEGAL CHRISTMAS HOURS 

8:304:00 IIOII.-THUIL 
8:30-8:30 HtL-SAT. 

DEC. 5th THRU DEC. 24tli 



LPO 

I FAU nUI SBHESI 



-TONIGHT! - 




FINAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE FALL QUARTER 1978 
This is the same final exam sdiedule that appeared in the schedule of classes^ but widi eoauaon course nunibermg for block exams. 



EXAM TIME 



7:30-9:30 a.m. 



MONDAY 



TUESDAY 



PHY 1 025, 2040C, 20410, TK 9:05 a.nL 
2042C, 3050C, 305lC 
3052C, 3123 



WEDNESDAY 



MWF 3:35 p.m. 




7:00, 8:45, 10:30 
Mmto M $1J0 



10:00-12:00N 



12:30-2:30 p.m. 



3:00-5:00 p.m. 



5:30-7:30 p.ni. 



8:00-10:00 p.m. 



MWF 8:00 a-m. 



£00^1, 2021, 2031 



TR 3:35 pan. 



MWF 4:40 p.m. 
CiM 1045, 1020 

M 6:50-9:50 



TR 12:20 p^m. MWF 9:05 a.m. 



MWF 1:25 p.m. FIN 3244 



TliURi»[IAY 

AOC 2001, 2021 
AOC3301 
FIN 3403 

TR 11:15 a.m. 
MIL 



FRIDAY 

*A]1 Modem Languages 
I^np^, Exaois 

TR 10:10 a.m. 



TR 8:00 a.m. 
3200 

FIN 3403 



TR 1:25 pan. 



MWF 11:15 aon. 



MAT 1033, MAC 1141 MWF 2:30 p.m. 
MAE 2810 

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Gordon threatens to abolish Regents 



by dfinit tnuiqii— gi 

ftambMv staff ' 



Senate Ways and Means CommittM Head Jack Gonkn 
tineatened to do away with an *'over-bureaiicnitized and 
over-centralized** Board of Regents yesterdajF. tf H cannot 
come up with an effective bluepriiit for running the State 
University System. 

Speakn^ before tiie Florida Edacatioii Council, Gordon 

said if tiie Regents can't "bring about tlie kind of results we 
want to see," he would be In livor of replacing them with 
nine diffeient Boards of Trustees, each responsible for only 
one state university. 

*'We ou^t to examine if m fact we do need them." the 
Miami Beach Democrat remarked. 

An outspoken critic of the BOR, Gordon reiterated his 
earlier criticisms, saying that the Board puts too much 
emphasis on research at the expense of instruction and that 
the State University System needs a more even distribution 
of money and programs. ' 

The Florida Education Council Gordon addressed is 
chaired by former Speaker of the House Fred Schultz. It is 



one of 37 state Goandls comprkiug the Edroatioo Council of 
Sutes, whldi was formed in 1%7 to sttmulate tnierstate 
co-o p e rati o n In improv fa g education systems. 

Ako speaking before the Education Council was George 
Baugham, co-chairperson of tiie Commission on the Future 
of Florida's Universities. The Commission, at the Board's 
request, compared the State University System to others 
nationwide in a report released this summer. 

Baugham restated some of the report's more disturbing 
findings that the University of Illinois library alone contains 
as many volumes as the entire nine-member Florida 
university system; that the California Higher Education 
System received $251 million more in federal research 
money last year than the Florida system; that California has 
20 times as many graduate faculty as Florida, despite the 
two states having an equal number of campuses (nine) and 
roughly equivalent enrollments; and that Florida faculty 
salaries are 7 percent less than the national average. 

Baugham pointed out that never in its history has the 

turn to GORDON, page 5 



State universities must cut spending 
by nearly $2.8 jnillion this year 



by orval Jackson 



TAMPA — The Board of Regents 
approved dian^g the name of Florida 
Tedmcrfoflca] University in Orlando to the 
Umversity of Central Florida yesterday and 
Eroded tlie ntee state universities to rc^ 
hadE spending for the current fiscal year by 
$2,773»000. 

The cnltedc in pending was ord e re d 
after finance oommlttee diairperson J. J. 
Daniel said revenues fit>m fsU quarter fee 
oofledions iefl below antidpaled leveb. 

"The head count at ^e universities Is 
about the same/' Danid said. *'but 
genmlly, the students are taking fewer, 
credit hoars." 

Each university was given a certain 
amount of spending to cutback, but the 
regents left it up to the individual 
university administrations to determine 
when the cuts should be made. 

The largest cut was for the University of 
Florida. $711,710. Other cuts, in order of 
size, were Florida State, $567,547; 
University of South Florida, $454,549; 
Florida International University, $248,630; 
Florida Technological University, 
$227,980; Florida Atlantic University, 
$169,973; Florida A«&M 'University. 
$157,322; University of West Florida, 
$135,440; and the University of North 
Florida, $100,145. 

The board gave unanimous approval to 
the university name change and will seek 
immediate approval from the state Board 
of Education in hopes of getting legislative 
approval during this week's special 



session. 

University President Trevor Colboum 
told the regents he was aware not everyone 
favored the mune' change, but said the 
majority of the students and faculty 
af^proved. 

itetiring regent Che^er Ferguson, who 
was on the board when FTU was founded 
and named, said the regents beKeved at ' 
^t time the nation* s space program would 
be permanently located at Cape Canaveral, 
would attract financial support from 
space-age industries and would become an 
outstanding center for science and 
tecnoiogical work. 

But he said after the assassinatkm of 
President John Kennedy and the 
movement of the space headquarters to 
Houston, **It was very apparent the dream 
would never be realized. 

**rve had misgivings for several years 
about the university's name," he said. "It 
is a misnomer." 

The meeting was the last for Ferguson, 
who has been on the board since March 
21, 1965 — the second longest tenure since 
the governing structure of the university 
system was set up in 1905. His service is 
surpassed only by that of P.V. Yonge of 
Pensacola, who served 23 years. 

•*He has left a major imprint upon the 
university system of Florida," said regent 
Marshall Criser in reading a resolution of 
appreciation. 

Ferguson, who served as regents 
chairperson for four years, received a 
standing ovation from the audience and 
responded with brief remarks. 




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Tonight 



UNIVERSITY FORUM 

ON IRAN 



Tuesday, December S 

2S5 ChMBiitiir l^t n w^ Hal 

PANELISTS: D''- I-^o Sandon, Department of Religion 

Dr. Marjorie Mowlam, DepartnDent of Governnr>ent 
Ronald Greer, Graduate Student, College of Education 
Abdoi Aft Biodell (kaduM Student 

MODERATOR: Dr. Jack Ahlers, United Campus Ministry 

STUDENT RESPONDEfff! PANEL 



SPONSQBSs Office of the Vice-Praeidem for Sfudwn AMra. United 
CamfXM Minietry, FSU Student G o ¥ir nm e m 



4 / Tuesday, December ^ 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 





i. companies help sustain it 



Color bar 



The color bar is that harsh line established by the ruling 
whites in South Africa that keeps ike natioii's bladis 
separate and uneqiia] in all respects — in terms of 
employment, recreation, ownership of property, you name 
it. 

And how in this enlightened day and age can a country 
maintain a color bar the way South Africa does? 

Why with the tacit aid of such major Amertean oil 
companies as. Mobil, Texaco and Standard Oil of 
California, which together own more than a third of 
American investments in South Africa. 

That's oil which keeps the racially repressive military 
nm^ag, we should npte, investments which, according to 
the non-profit Council on Economic Priorities, '^sustain the 
apartheid system." 

Despite the three oil companies* **equal pay for equal 
work'* commitments — which we do applaud — the 
Council notes they have made little effort to improve 
conditions for blacks. 

Consider this statement from Caltex (the name of the 
joint Standard Oil/Texaco venture) as quoted by the 
Council: *'ln the event of any conflict between South 
African laws and equal opportunity employment practices, 
the former must prevail." 

The Council, supported by donations and grants from 
organizations such as the Rockefeller and Ford 
foundations, cites employment figures of the oil companies 
in South Africa that indicate an exceedingly 
(proportionate number ctf blacks in unskilled labor 
positions while whites dominate the skilled and 
management posts in that country. 

The color bar apparently extends to the South Afrioin 
branches of these mega-corporations too. 

By their economic actions, Texaco, Standard Oil of 
California and Mobil sanction apartheid in South Africa. 
Apartheid still spells racism where we come from, and it 
still spells racism at the tip of the African continent. By 
sanctioning apartheid in South Africa through what we 
believe are callous and irresponsible corporate positions, 
tbe three oil companies emit that same stench of racism. 

We can fight the color bar in South Africa by letting the 
oil companies know where we stand on their economic 
involvement in that country. We can cancel credit cards 
with a strong word of expUmation that they will not be 
renewed until more humanitarian policies are enacted by 
the companies in South Africa or until the companies puU 
out altogether. 

So long as corporations like Texaco, Standard and M<^il 
continue doing business wtUi the whke government of 
South Africa with theh* corporate mouths glued shut in 
areas of vital social concern, white government will 
probably continue. 

Corporations have a social re^nsibiU|a| |o^^« ]t'a» Jiigh 
time they started living up to it. 



Florida Flambeau Foundation Inc. tMJSiness and advertising office 206 N. 
Woodward Avenue, phone 644-4075; Newsroom 204 N. Woodward Avenue, 
phone 644-6606; Production/Mediatype lab 314 Univwtity Union, phone 
644«744: CMM ad offtee 306 UnKmity Union, phoni 644-^6. MMing 
tMmm, P.O. BoK 41-7001, FkNtdi SM Univaraity, Tiliti , FkxMi. 

Steve Watkioa Editor 

Beth Rudowske News Editor 

SMwQrBedhigfield I^rts Editor 

Duad Vogt Assistant News Editor 

Kail#ip|j(phi Arts / Features Editor 



Letters 



Frat still displaying ib racism 



Editor; 

The article that appeared in 
The Flambeau a few weeks ago 
attacking the Sigma Phi Epsilon 
symbol of racism accomplished 
very little in the way of aroitsHig 
the black conscience here at this 
university. Today, ractw is 
institottonalized and more 
coifcealed. In the past it was 
overt racism and the fraternity 
Sigma Phi Epsilon has chosen to 
display their overt racism, 
degrading all black students 
who attend this university. 

Blacks at Florida State 
University have become pas- 
sive. We take for granted that 
the scales of justice are now 
equal and seem to be content 
with the way things are. If this is 
what you are thinking, you had 
better make a reassessment of 
your opinion. Have you heard of 
reverse discrimination? The 
Bakke decision? This is just a 
reminder that the scales of 
justice are still tilted and Black 
America still bears the burden 
of injustice in these United 
States of America. To my fellow 
concerned students at Florida 
State University, I say we must 
continue our protest activities as 
our generations before us. 

If ever there was a time to 
become active, now is the time. 
We must intervene and take 
whatever steps are necessary to 
strike down their symbol of 
racism. The Lantern of 



Ignorance on the statuette is 
painted in the colors of the Afro- 
AmeriauiMition: red, black and 
green. Now teB me, can their 



choice of colors be merely 
coincidental? Doa*t sweep diis 
issoe under the mg. Let's unite. 



lantern 
bo/ at 
Sigma 
Phi 

Epsilon 
fraternity 



God was not present at conference 



bi his letter in the Nov. 9 issue 
•of The Flambeau, Mr. Edward 
Blanton tactfully accuses me of 
closing my eyes to the facts 
brought out in the **Church and 
Homosexuality** conference when 
I wrote my analysis (Oct. 24). 
Abandoning satire, what are the 
facts? I would refer readers to 
The Flambeau summary of the 
V conference in the Oct. 16 issue 
since it is an accurate public 
record of what took place. It 
contains ample testimony to the 
validity of my fourfold criticism of 
the conference (Mr. Blanton's 
recapitulation of my criticisms 
accidentally included an example 
of the fourth criticism as a fifth). 

Consider the following addi- 
tional facts. The Biblical view of 
human sexuality is totally hetero- 
sexual in orientation. God never 
speaks approvingly of anything 
other than heterosexual love. 
When God said it was not good 
for man to be alone. He made a 
woman for a man, f^H a nian. 



believe that homosezoality is 
wrong in God*s eyes, at least own 
up to disagreeing with Scripture. 

For those who don't agree that 
the above accurately describes 
God's view, but that it is only 
man*s opinions and attitudes, the 
argument shifts to different 
ground. Then we must discuss 
the evidence for the authorship 
and authority of the Bible, and 
perhaps even the evidence for the 
existence of God. Space here 
doesn't suffice to enter into this 
topic, but I would welcome any 
inquiries. The facts are there. 

Perhaps a god was at the 
conference. But in light of the 
facts above. I doubt that it was 
the God of the Bible. 

Steve Figaii 



Letters to The Flambeau mvttlWllmilHf to 300 words, signed by the author and inc»iide 
a phone number and strati aMrnt. THt Flannbeav rasarvas ma riglit la adit all letters 
for langfffc. Mamaa wtM be wIthtwW on raquaat. The Flamhaaa prum — kmn^t^ktt 
comply with these standards, except ttwjse on extraneous topics of no relevance to 
readers, letters wtiicti may be legally actioi>able for raasons of libal or copyright 
violaflara, and in caaas wlwn latfars racafvad an fha aama topic raadi a P0int_«f 
redu ndancy . Wli aWi ai ar wal ep W o ns expressed agree wrth' 
Flambeau is nat a caraMdaratian govarning publication. 



Common sense and an hcmest 
reading of the Bible indicate that 
acceptance of homosexuality 
uRdercuts God*s view of 
marriage, the family, and repro- 
duction. Even when read out of 
context, the Levitical injunctions 
specifically label homosexuality a 
sin, an abomination to God, and 
worthy of the death penalty. This 
judgment is not changed in the 
New Testament. In 1 Corinthians 
6:9-11, God specifically says that 
homosexuals will not enter His 
kingdom, but that a change in 
lifestyle is both mandatory and 
possible. How could God have 
made it any clearer? Seriously, if 
God had wanted to say "NO" to 
homosexuality, what else could 
He have said? If you don't want to 



Myers Park run leaves legibldLors breathless 



Wf fitut cox 

flambMw staff writer 

A few pounds of legislative lard were begrudgingly shed 
;;i 1 allahassee's Myers Park yesterday. 

The occasion was a Legislative Fun Run. and amidst the 
park 's natural shelter of richly colored fall oaks and tall pond 
pines. 30 state officials grunted and groaned their way over 
a 12 mile course to promote a more healthy Hfft ftt^ of 
Representatives. 

And if simply running the course wasn't enough, theie 
arc 20 exercise stations along the course which left many 
1( tii^lators short of breath only moments after starting. 

Speaker of the House, Hyatt Brown, D-Daytona, and Rep. 
Fran Carlton, D-Orlando, planned the event hoping that 
once House members tried numing that many would work it 
into their daily schedules. 

"individuals who work under stress such as legislators," 
Brown said, **need some way to let out that sttess." 
Running, according to Brown provides one of the best ways 
he's found to accomplish this. . 

The fact that Myers Park and the paiooars lie just a 
half-mile downhill from the Capit<d may make tegular 
running even aove isvitii^ for stale 



Blown himself runs regiiiarfy, twiMo-iwee ato a 4t$n 
even during the legisfaitive acnioB. 

He has traversed courses similar to the Myers Puk 
parcours in GaisesviUe as well in his iMWrtom ii of DayloM. 

After he'd oompleted the ooofse. he ofimd aoae 
suggestions to park officials ooaceming the eierdse 
statons, but thought the come was chaUenging as a whole. 

Carlton and Brown both emphasiied that regular exercise 
not only allows people to feKefe stieas aad itaf hi food 
condition, but that such programs also sMke people man 
idert mentally and gives then higher levelB of caeigy. 

Carlton, who has a syndicated exercise pfofiafli televised 
Ib oestral Florida, received attentioa teat year by nnadvg tp 
the stau^ of the 22-story Capitol every morBhig. 

She said that akhough many legislators dready raa 
together, that greater peer p re ssar e auqr be created if aMfe 
legislators are simply sHide aware of nuulBg's benefits. 

Brown finished n the middle part of the first nundng 
group with UsA^ Haben, D-Psfanetto, aad Dick BadMlar, 
D-Orhmdo. Carkon arrived kte at the park and led a second 
gfoap more pbfitically paunched that Brown's group — 
through the hilly parcours. Brown and ooBeagoes began 
thekankiOHs Odyssey from the capknl oonndes to fi 



ewpliaiiTr the accessMflty of the ntnnhig atta. 

Poet pressure aad word of mouth. Brown said, would be 
collect the greatest number of paitkipaatt in this votaataiy 

program. 

"We're not Being to be coiupetitivet ' ' he emphasiaed, 
**but we m^ post individual's tinws. so that people can 
watch thdr impf n w mr nt. if things wort well we could have 



com 



afler wcMk." 

Most of the House members arrived dressed in the typical 
lUHiing apparel of tennis shoea, T-shirts, and gym shorts. 

Charles Nergard. R-Fort Pierce , however, showed up ii 
double knit slacks and a dress shirt. He started the couraa 
with Carltou rnthuiiaitkilly smilmg and adBng Brapm. 
who was just finishing his run, "coach.** 

But when the 49-year-old l^^slaliMr reached 
station 12 half way through the eome — his shirt 
ieB4ale prespiratioK«-^lm wUspeted quickty betweea fi#a 

43^^ tl^KKi ^ ^Sll^BBPfl^ HBMIIIfcfcCJlSJB "J^U^Bl ^IfiUdlsJ ^iJ^^J ^^j^lliljhlrik^A 

He stopped his joggh^ there and wafted Hie remainder of 
the course, but iirtlnuited he phmned to fstm ami finish dm 
course at a later dM. 



Forum will explore situation in Iran 



from staff reports 

The country of fran has held a prominent place in the 
news in recent weeks both internationally and locally 
with the anti-shah demonstrations, many of which have 
taken sharp turns toward violence. Fighting between 
Iranian protestors and police at a ra% three weeks ago at 
FSU ended with nine arrests and several injuries. 

A nniverslty focnm tonight at 7:30 in the FSU 
Chemistry Lecture HaO will focus on the Iranian situation 
abroad m attempts to air some disparate views and open 
discnssloii on U.S. pdicy m ban, U.S. raflitary 
involvemeiit and the ethics of that involvement. 

Sponsored by the office of student afEshrs, student 
govemmort imd the Gan^ Ministries Association, the 
forum wil feature a panel discussion among FSU 
professors Maijorie Mowlam and Leo Sandon and 
students Abdol AH Bigdeli and Ron Gteer. Bg^t student 
organizations at FSU have been invited to participate on 



a responding panel; they range from the Inter-Fraternity 
Couneil and Hillel to the scholarship houses and the 
Women's Center. 

In a separate matter which stems form the 
aforementioned Iranian incident at FSU, witnesses and 
others with information on the Iranian demonstration in 
the Union courtyard Nov. 15 are being sought by the 
Leon County Public Defender's Office. Representatives 
of the puMic defender's office will be in Room 346 Union 
tomorrow from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. and have req ue s te d 
all witnesses to meet with them at that time. 

Several of the arrested Iranians have enlisted the aid of 
the public defender's office to defend them on charges 
ranging fron^ assault on a police officer to resisting anest 
with violence. 

Witnesses unable to meet with representatives 
tomorrow are urged by the public defender's office to call 
Ed Harvey at 486-2458. 



Gordon 



from page 3 



Florida system produced a Nobel Laureate. 
The University of California at Berkeley 
alone, he said, currently has 15 on its 

faculty. 

The report showed, he emphasized, that 
Florida's universities have sufficient 
physical means, but lag far behind other 
states in terms of overall quality. 

We've come the first 50 percent of the 
way. " Baugham said. '*Now let's finish 
the job. Universities aren't institutions 
driven by a great Oedipal complex; we 
need money and we need to spend it." 

Gordon chided the Board of Regents for 
complaining the state doesn't appropriate 
enough money. He pointed out that 30 
percent of the budget of his alma mater, 
the University of Michigan, comes from 
private contributions. He did not provide a 
figure for Florida universities. 

Gordon, as Ways and Means diief , has 

ultimate coiKiql over tiie budget. He 

decried Univefslty of Borida President 

Robett Maiston'sfimd-raismg campaign to 

repfau:e recently fired UF fbotbafl coach 

DottgDickey. 
*Ws oat raising DOOJXN) to rei^ as 

football coach, and yet he can't raise the 



money to put 100,000 books on the library 
shelves." he said. 

The books Gordon mentioned are 
unshelved at the University of Florida 
library because funds for graduate 
assistants to do the job havie run out 

Gordon urged university administrators 
to seek private dollars to compensate for a 
shortage of state money. 

He proposed an incentive system, where 
by the state would match, on a one-to-one 
basis, private contributions. 

BOR officials were in Tampa for their 
regular monthly meeting and unavailable 
for comment. 

At a morning organizational meeting of 
the House Higher Education Committee, 
Speaker Hyatt Brown reaffirmed his 
committment to improving Florida's 

universities. 

•*Education is one of my top priorities." 
he said. High quality universities are 
necessary in order to bolster Florida's 
economy, he added. 

The new speaker said a leading 
aerospace firm decided to relocate 
elsewhere after deciding Florida's 
research facilities were insufficient to meet 
its needs. 

**This committee has the keys to unlock a 
kit of these types of doors." he said. 



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6 / Tuesday, December 5. 1978 FLOR'nA FLAMBEAU 




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USED CAR SUPERMARKET 

2525 W. Tennessee 




HONDA SOOF 1972 Yoshmura cam, 
Kerker headers, K8>Ns, Lockhart Oil 
Cooler 8i Thermostat. Lester Mags, 
Continental tires, l uR g ags rack. 
Better than new. 575-3901 



HONDA CL125 STREET BIKE VERY 
CLEAN NEEDS MINOR WORK $150 
CALL 224-0003 




Two bdr house near FSU, unfurnished 
kitchen equipped air, fenced yard pets 
ok. $225. mo. 1-997-2965. AAonticellO- 
evenings. 
I 

SUBLET 1BRM. START JAN 1. 
CLOSE TO FSU $150. MONTH CALL 

224 2724 ANYTIME 

Sublet Ig 1 bdrm apt $160 mo. Start 
mid-Dec. Keep my $100 deposit. Pool 
8i laundry. 1 block fr FSU. 224-6327 

Sublet 1 bdrm fum apt at Colony 
Club! Pool, luxury appliances, shag 
carpet, etc. Please call 2249632 

Responsible female roommate 
n ssds d to share 2br unfurnished apt 
w-same at Miuion Ridge Apts. $50. 
deposit, $125. per month which 
includes utilities. Come by Apt 146 or 
call 878-5026. Also roommate needed 
for 2 br trailer in quiet neighborhood 
near Tallahassee siMrfs arena $50 
deposit $90 per monm which includes 
uNlities. Call 878-5026 

L^rge 1 bdrm. fum. 3 biks. from FSU 
$155 incl. cable TV and garbage 
collectton. Sorry no pets. Call r sH do n t 

222-4505 



Large turn, studio apt. $135. month 
includes cable and garbage collection. 
Dunwoody Apartments, 405 Dun- 
woody St. Res. manager 222-4505, er 
385-9392. Sorry, no pets. 

Lrg 1 bdr turn apt at Regency 'Park 3 
biks from FSU. Pool, tennis ds, caMe 
incl. 195 mo 222«7800 (F-IO) 

Takeover contract at Osceola Hall all 
meals maid service pool sauna TV for 
more mfo call Wsndy 2M3t1S 

SUBLET: PRINCE MANOR APTS. 
2 bdrm, unfurn, pool, laundry, walk to 

FSU. Call 575-3056. 

ROOMMATE WANTED: FEAAALE 
GRAD STUDENT TO SHARE 2 BR 
FURN DUPL.$75-MO-l-'/2UTIL. 
AVAIL. MID DEC. 224-3698 

1 bdrm furnished apt. walk to FSU 
Quiet and private-$175 includes all 
utilities^ 2244W04 

Sublet 2 br. apt. starting Jan. 1 - June. 
205 - month. Includes water, sewer 8i 
caMe. Fully carpeted, central tieat $■ 

air, dishwasher, disposal, pool. Low 
utilities. Call 575-6609. Susan or Ellen. 

HELP! Sublet my gigantic 1 br apt. 
Take over lease Dec. 5 until June. 

Gold carpet, dishwasher, disposal, 
central air-heat. Pool, sauna 8i 
laundry room. Walking distance to 
FSU. Utiis. average $20. Unfurnished 
Call 575-7635 or 644-4075 Gregg 

SUBLET 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED 
APT. IN PLAZA FOR WINTER 

QUARTER. CALL 222-2752. 

looking to upgrade your living condi- 
tions? Here's your chance. Quaint i 
bedroom apt on College Ave. $T25- 
menlh Call Gordon-222-9787 after 6 

2 bedroom house near FSU, 
unfurnished kitchen equipped, fenced 
yard, pets ok $225 mo. 1-997-2*85. 
Monfecello evenings 

SUBLETSTUDIO APT 190 MO INCL. 
UTIL. CALL 2244020 

SUBLET OSCEOLA HALL FOR 2 
AAorF POOL, SAUNA, FOOD, PAR- 
TIES CALL ANYTIME 222-6659. 

SUBLEASE STUDIO APT 190mo 
incls.utlls. Walking distance from 
FSU Call 224-6028 Call now and get a 
special discount 

Counh^ Living: Fum 2 BR home on 

farm. Lg rooms Garden planted quiet 
people only. Avail Jan — June 79. 
$180 mo. Call 878 2994 Soon! 

Sublet 1 Bdrm Fum apt. Cable, pool, 
laundry. Across from law scttool $175 
mo. Dec. 15 or Jan. 1st Call 222-9344 

SUBLET FOR JAN 2 BR NEW FRN 
UPSTAIRS, POOL, LAUNDRY. 

WALK TO FSU CALL 222-0409. 



Osceola Hall will have a limited 
number of spaces available winter 
quarter. For info call 222 5010 or come 
by 500 Chapel Dr. "The Place For Yeu 

ROOMS FOR RENT . ALPHA XI 

DELTA SORORITY $225 PER 
QUARTER CALL DEDE 599-9778 or 
599-9922 



A^^ 




Female to share 2brm apt T/j miles 
from campus. Non-smkr preferred. 
222-4517 90 p er mo -1- electric 

Fm rmmt wanted. Start Dec or Jan in 
1 bdrm Reg. Pk. Apt. $95 a mo, Vj util 
Oi no deposit. Call Cathv 224 3650 

Fm rmmt beg wtr qrt Ibdrm Iblock to 
FSU 77.50 -1- Vz utilts. call 224-2513 
nights. 

Male Rmt Needed for 2 bdrm fum apt. 
WOiS qtr. 2 pools sauna tennis 8i 
racquettMil crt own rm 8i bth 110 + 
dep 8i t/^ util 8i ph. Call 57S-7136 Denny 
Location \ mlto from campus 

Rm mate needed Jan 1st with 2 brad 
students 3bdrm 2bath 75.00 mo. -1-1-3 
utilities. 85.00 deposit Call Matt 
386-7869anytime Hartsfield Rd. 

FM RA«MT TO SHARE 2 BDRM APT 
w-3 OTHER GIRLS $61-I-V4 ULT 
NEAR FSU CALL 576-5984 

FEM RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM 
APT. ViRT Si util REGENCY PK 
APTS AVAIL. DEC15 224 9113 

TALENT NIGHT AT J J ZACKARY'S 

$50-$20 $10 PRIZES 
Anyone interested must audition wed. 
2-6pm W. Tenn. St. 

AAale roommate needed to share apt. 
for winter quarter-IHaia Apts-walk to 
campus $804-v^eKpenses Call 222-264S 

I WOULD LIKE TO PURCHASE A 
TICKET TO THE RUSSIAN BALLET 
FSU BOX NO. U-6419 

PERSON TO SUBLET 2-BDRM 
FURN APT OVER LOOKING POOL 
AT PLAZA APTS. PLEASE CON- 
TACT Ronni or Goorge 222-1359 

ROOMA^TE 2-BEDROOM APT 

CLOSE TO FSU V2 RENT -I- UTIL 
MOVE IN DEC OR WTV4 5752234 

Fm rmt wanted in Plaza Apt. Two 
great nonsmoking grad students 91 
monthly & 1-3 utilities. Call 224-0271 
Yvonne 

50 CU.FT.SCUBA TWIN TANKS 
WITH BACK PACK CALL PATTY 
WK. 87 7 9033 HM. 222-1966 

MOTOR DRIVE FOR CANON F-1 IN 
GOOD CONDITION PAY CASH 
CALL 2248045 OR 644-5505 ASK FOR 

JONATHAN 

F rmmt needed starting Dec. 15 Furn 
apt Sblocks from cam. STIB me. plus 
util 576-5067 

MALE RMMT TO SHARE 
2 BDRM APT AT PLAZA CALL 
DAN 222-3541 

F RM NEEDED FOR WINT & SPR 

QURT'S IN 2-BEDROOM FURN APT 
WALKIN DIST TO CAMPUS CALL 
IMMEDIATELY 222 2223 

ROOMMATE NEEDED - NICE LOC. 
NEAR SCHOOL - MUST BE NEAT 
CALL SCOTT 575-5441, EVE. 

Wanted person interested in photogra- 
phy to help in a Old Time Pttoto 
business, some travel necessary Cali 
Charles after 5 at 576-1726 

Non smoke f rmmt to share 2 bdrm 
apt in downtown area. Prefer serious 
Student who gets crazy occasionally to 
preserve sanitv. 9mjk74 «i««jufMw» 

Responsible, clean, non-smoking 

male to share 1-bdr. apt at PLAZA 
Apts If interested call 222-9905 
AFTER 6 p.m. 



Liberal Fem Rmmt to sliare 3 
hse near FSU $75 mo.-Hine-ltiird uffi 

nice yard 576-5039 

HOUSEMATE WANTED, BEAUTI- 
FUL HOUSE 1 MILE SE OF 
CAMPUS. LARGE YARDS, TREES, 
WINDOWS. 100 MONTH. 576-4790 
EVENING 

Female Roommate Wanted Start Jan 
1. 1 mile from FSU $100-t-one-thtrd 
utilities. Furnished 3 



Mature FM needed to share bedroom 
Of a 2 brm V/i bath townhouse $87 -l- 
one^lfiird util. CaH 576-0S7B 

FM RAAMT 3BDRM FURNISHED 

$62. ONE-I-THIRD UTILITIES 2048 
WARWICK YARD WINTER ONLY, 
OWN RM SIMfm 

Swingshlft moNier wants female grad 

student to rent room. Rent reduced in 
exchange for babysitting. Call 
3 06 87 43 after 6 p.m. 



HELP! NEED TWO TICKETS TO 
BOLSHEVIC BALLET CALL 599-9090 
ASK FOR CHARLIE 

Female roomate to stiare nice 2 
bedroom house. Watfwr dryer. Etc. 
Call Debby 877-2534 



Need 1 roomato (Pref. female) neat 
and dependable. 4 bedrooms washer 

dryer — call 576 0019 John or Chad 



Roomate wanted large 3bedroom apt. 
Will have own t>edroom. Call between 
10 Si 11 p.m. 222-7074 

Fm Rmmt beg WTR QRT 1 bdrm 1 
block to FSU 77J0 «i Vi utills. Call 
224 2513 nights 

Rmt needed for lg. cooperative tMUSe 
near FSU. Share responsMMffiOB, 
food, expenses. Call 32440M 

DESPERATE! WANTED 4 TICKETS 
TO THE RUSSIAN BALLET DEC. 6. 
Please call 2a4-fS13 

Christian Roommato wanted rton- 

smoke 100 yds FSU. Split rent 160 mo. 
>/2Util. Laundry, pool AC. MIKE 
iH-t 4562 

F. Rmt needed to share Ibr Fum apt 

close to FSu $84 -f Utilities 

month Call 222-6697 

Fm rmmt needed immediately for Ibr 
apt close to FSU. $85-l-Wutil. 
NonsmoNorsonlyt CaH 21X4112 after f 

p.m. 




$50 per 100 envelopes stuffed atKl 
addressed at home. Writo Benco 
Enterprises Bm SBO Austin Tx 7B788. 

PART TIME EVENINGS. 6-9p.m. 
3 nights. Car necessary. Celt aM>2S1i. 

.2-4p.m. Mon-Fri. 

FREE ROOM, BOARD, SMALL 
SALARY in exchange for infant care. 
Must be experienced, non-smoker. 
Flexible schedule, but nnust have at 
least three weekdays free. Car 
required. Call 3aS-7482. 

Extra hours earn you $500. per 1000 
stuffing envelopes with our circulars. 
For info: write SOiS Enterprise Dept. 
105 PO Box 1150 Middlelown, Ohto 
45042 



Leon County Food Co-op is accepting 
resumes for the position of coordina- 
tor. Applications accepted Nov. 28 to 
Dec. 12. Those with the five highest 
ratings will be contacted for an 
interview to take place on Dec. 17. A 
decision will be reached by ttie ISth. 
Salaried positton base d en 3 0 hours 
per wsek; health Insurance, and 2 
weeks paid vacation. Additional info 
may t>e obtained at LCFC storefront. 

Ol'LRSEAS JOBS — Summer-full 
time. Europe, S. America, Australia, 
Asia, etc. All fields, $500 1200 
monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. 
Free info — Write: International Job 
Center, Box 4490-FB Berkeley, CA 
94704. 



neeoeo fo 



Experienced weitresses 
work lunch shift at exclusive 
restaurant. 386 4541 or 385 3481. 

Summer Job — Swim coach wanted 
for Panama City Swim Club swim 
team, good pay, excellent location. 
For more information send brief 
resume before December 23 to 
Penama City Swim Team, 306 
Virginia Avenue, Lynn Haven, 
Florida 32444. 

TUTORS-HELP CHILDREN READ! 
PART-TIME TUTORS AND AIDS 
CREATIVE DEDICATED PATIENT 
576-7522 DAYS 878 1606 EVE 




Typing — all sorts — reasonable — 
correcting typewriter — transcripts 
Of tapes. Reliable. Call 576-59U 9 to 5. 

Typing: experienced professional 
secretary with IBM self correcting 
typewriter 75c to 1.00 per page Call 
893-4524. Special rates availabte. 

I DO CHAIR WEAVING AND 
CANING. Good references, reason- 
able rates. Call Rhonda araund 0 
evenings. 224-0312. 



HOUSE PAINTING 
WALLCOVERING 

PRESSURE WASHING 

experienced 8i reasonable 
Call Jeff 224-7745 for estimate 

Fast accurate typist-lBM correcting 

selec. -papers, C 

Durbin 576-1908 



SUNNY DAY NURSERY SCHOOL 

FSU. Certified Teachers. 
7:30-5:30. Call 877-0334 



APPLIANCCMMIR 
Service on all ma|er appliances, air 

conditioning and heeting. Sales- 
reconditioned units with 90 day 
warranty. Call Marshall, days 
599-7879 (pocket beeper) 
Evenmg t7»4016. LICENSED 

IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! 

Send $1.00 for your 254fiage, ntaH 

order catalog of Conegiafe Research. 

10,250 topics listed. Prompt Delivery. 
Box 25907 B, Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 
(213) 477-8226 . 

BASS LESSONS 
Jazz and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 



Keep in tune 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNING 
RESTOR AT ION, MOV I NGS, 
ESTIAAATES 



Students — Still can't spell and 
punctuatoproperely? Confused by the 
rules of correct grammar? English 
ma|or will correct and type your 
papers. Rates depend on paper. See 
Gail rm 306 Union, mornings. 



Typing for students A 
term p ape rs Sb diss. 10 yrs. experience 



TYPING 

TERM PAPERS, MANUSCRIPTS, 
DISSERTATIONS PH. S7S-S6IS 

Professional secretary-typist. Term* 
papers, theses, disserfatiens, 

resumes, etc. Rita 575-7961 




JO'S FOR HAIR 

the difficult we do immediatly, the 
impossible takes a little longer. We're 
the ones to see if you've got p r o t rtow 
hair. Call us today. 221-1112 
1020 N. Monroe 

NEED INFORMATION 

Anyone witnessing or tievlng any 

information concerning the Iranian 
demostration of Nov. 15 please come 
to room 346 of the union Wed. Dec. 6 
between 10a.m. and 1p.m. 
ED HARVEY 

Office Of the Public 



Experienced typist requires financial 
assistance via typing in my home. All 
types of typing, including Itieses, and 
scientific papers. .Price negot. Phone 
3059053 anyMme, 3051392 dey» 

COLLEGIATE STUD MODELS 
Wanted for Playgin type photos. 
Photos made in your area. WrIto: 
Photo No4f8, 256 S. Robertson Blvd., 
Beverly Hills, Ca. 90211. 

Af^lANCSS 

Will buy and-or haul off your 
appliances. Call Marshall days 
599-7879 (pocket besper) ewenkias 
878-5026 LICENSED 

ASTROLOGICAL CONSULTATIONS 
Self -development, compatability, per- 
sonality patterns, career aptitude, 
children. Thorough, prefessienal 
counseling at reasonaMe rales. 
Fred AAcDonaM, M.S. 
P.O. Box 20374 
Tallahassee, 32304 

Completo Hairstyling-Wosli, cond. 
tion, cut A blow dry Acid 
balance perms Henna's 
neufral or color short hair or 
for long hair. All work by 
students under supervision of quali- 
fied insh^tors. Tall. College of 
Barber Styling. 1221 Appalachee 
Pkwy. Call STZ-aOM for appt. Oogod 
Mondays. 

FSU SPECTRUM IS FILLING 
SPOTS FOR WINTER QUARTER. 
ANY BAND THAT PLAYS ANY 
ORIGINAL TUNES NOW IS YQUR 
CHANCE TO GET ON TELEVISION 
FSU SPECTRUM CALL222S503 ASK 
FOR ISAAC ASST PRODUCER 

ALL GIRLS INTERESTED IN 
WINTER RUSH, SIGN UP THIS 
WEEK MON-THURS 10-2 IN UNION 
COURTYARD OR AT 322 UNION 



BVCRYEOOY'S DOtNO IT. 

Looking good and saving money at 
JO'S FOR HAIR 222-1112 1020 N. 



Keg Lounge 
5-7p.m. Mon.-Sat 



Restaurant Rum 
draff 



IMAAaCULATE TYPING I'm SO 
broke Tin livin' in a tent with nothin' 
to eat; I got holes in my shoes and 
can't afford boone. But I don't want 

sympeftiy, fu ^ , 

^75 paoo^ GsnNM^ Oannl at 



NELPf NEED BIDE TO Tam., 

or nearby city. D« 8 or 9^ V 
with gas Call Laura 22427ii 

WE TAKE THE TIME Tft nT* 
RIGHT HeadQuarters^^i 
perms and great ha.rcutj m-JT'* 
^ 2017 w. Pensacoia si STSJT 




— - w — I to your hair vo f ^iii k.^: 
to you. l.anham Prodocri imjr^ 
Headquarters Haircuttino malt 
Pensacoia St. 574- 1511 • 



29 yr old grad sdt inteiieclyrt m 
fairly good looking, athletic qirZ' 
liberated seeks relatlfln«yr3 
compatible female. David Ms! 
20253. Tall. 32304 

XMA$ BREAK HAIRCUT 
Come see us for that special 

you need for the holidays jD'ttM 
HAIR 222 1112 1020 N. Atonr^ 

Tuesday Nitos were msoi ^ 

Michelob $1.75 Pitcher 35c giM 
7-12PM at Brew & Cue 422 N. 0w«a 



MICHELOB SPECIAL 
ISC A GLASS 
$1.7$ a PITCHER 
NOON TO MIDNIGHT EVERY wia 
POOR PAUL'$ POURNOMS B 

JOGGING SUITS. SJ^L.XL 
over 100 to Choose from reg 32SCcr 
$20. POOR RICHARD S (MtwtM 
Publix & Eckerd's m 
Shopping Center. 574-21M 

REG. GRINDER AND 
DRAFT OF SODA SI 25 AT 
THE PUB 1312 W. TENN 
ST. 11 a.m. — 4 pjw. TUES. 

Today's trading post treat 
Free medium soft drink wiw 1 
turkey and cheese sandwtiicr ^ 
$1.97. Try lunch at our ptact. louw 



JIM, I'M REALLY GOING TOMIE 
YOU NEXT QUARTER. BE 0000 
LOVE, PUMPKIN 

To the Hartford girl from URi - 
pisaii let me know if you ne«d a ridt 
Dove In Magnolia. 

Alptta Lambda Delta initiation t- 
Dorman Hall on Dec. 7 all mamtan 
mustattond Sunday DrsM R«B»k«f 

Ride needed for 2 to Key Wast y 
Miami anytime after Dec 13 w 
Share $ and driving. Call Joyti 
Evenings 575-3213 



TONIGHT at the TRADING POST - 
TRY A HOT TURKEY AND CHEESE 
SANDWHKKf ANI>-A STEAMIM 
BOWL OP SOUP FOR 



TONIGHT at the TRADING POST - 
Try a hot turkey and c^eeje 
sandwhich and a steaming bow' 
soup for $2.10. From 5:00 till 10 » 
p.m. ■ _ 

CONGRADULATIONS NEW ALPHA 
XI DELTA IMITATES WE LOVE YA 
— NO. 1 PLEDGE CLASS PJ 

WANTED TO RECEIVE $100W 
CALLSTHOaO 

I WONDER HOW MANY PEOPLi 
GET THEIR DAILY KICIC$ FRO*A 
READING THIS CRAP 

SIGAAA PHI'S 
WHY DON'T YOU CLEAN YOUR 
DIRT FROM THE BRIDGE? 



TOO BAD THE CIVIC CENTER 
ISN'T BEING BUILD WITH THE 
SPEED THE GOVERNOR'S MAU 
IS. THE CIVIC CTR. WORKERS 
NEED MORE WHITE CROSSES O" 
FEWER POLITICI ANS 

Have an idea? A problem «S^7^^ 
Government cowlf»o'*«V^"' 
day— 24 Hrs — can «rsi lufip^"' 

576-4526 




POUND: 14kt. GOLDFILaD 
NECKLACE ON INTRAMURAlS 
FIELD. CALL PEGGY 2J44157. 

LOST: Husky -sh^mix dog^ He's ' 

mos old, llgM "^'^^^ 
markings on his face. Was wear«0 < 
red collar with tag. Ree«rd. 

Found at FSU GvHle game geHJ 
with diamonds call 5750553 aftefj^ 



1 mind, 
furry. If found* 



Lost Wsd. In union . red - „ 
umbrella. If found, please cP* 
Very imp. ! 

nf^ed. size, t>row«i '"^ 
keep it. I don't w*^ 

■S IT mmymmy _ „^ 

Lost: one pair gold framed 9'^ 
They were in the pocket ^ 'L- 
raincoat left in BCM BLD G.'^ rT 
Yeu can keep the * 



(Boyd Lcwh 
other poHti 
PuMk Nad* 

well 
pvbUcati 

OKOl K 

Kii Klnx 

bcdshcct 
Borthea-stc- 
communits 
new br< 
leaders i 
Uctks of M 
began retu 
Scores o 
beatings in 
whites hav 
last Februa 
and boycoi 
local high 
protest ch. 
and job 
organized 
relatively 
called the 
issippt wer 
by Klan ra! 
to the no I 
armed, ai 
opposing i 
into one ai 
Labor !>:r- 

Bui i 
Okolona ai f 
upper Ml 
face -oft b 
United Le 
somewha 
Mississippi 
city. As a r 
have bcgu| 
searching 

In Ok.)| 
fnentalit\ 
fence aronl 
closed an ll 
keep the d 
United Leii 

"If anv 
aren't goij 
run." 
Howard 
the Unitr !| 
retaliate 



THE 

articles, a I 
quarter ( !| 

"CHRIJ 
be the th« 
at the Un 
Park Ave 
p.m. 

CCIS 
writing c 
Brvan Hal 

ALL SI 
a{>pointm< 
portrait U 
table in 
informati* 
floor louni 

CPE Nl 
meet torn 
to discussi 




ARM IS THK mmn 

lELP! NEED RlQE TO Ta**. 

r nearby City. Dec 8 ° 
^'th gas. €•!( Laura ??; t>7J^'*» 

TAKE THE TIAAC t-^ *■ 

yood to your hair so •r^ilTi: 

" you Lanham ProriiJ^ ^ 
^ea(Jqo«rter$ Malramtai ^ 



y'' old grad sdt 

1 1 r I y 

Iberated 



]mas break HAmcirr 

lome see us for that sottcui k.i. ^ 
to need for WW hSidSX^jLIfi^ 
VaiR 222 ygi:??^* ^ 

[uesday Nites were made for 
'wchelob $1.75 Pifchtr - 3$c oiZ 
12PM at Brew ft Gut 411 If. OvSl 



UCHELOB SPBOAL 

^ A GLASS 
...75 • PITCHIR 

IpON TO MIDNIGHT EVERY WM 
to OR PAUL'S POURMOUsY 

^55L*H choose from reg. 32 so oniv 
.^0^ POOR RICHARD^ btTwwn 

REG. GRINDER ~AND ^ 
DRAFT OF SODA $1.25 AT 
THE PUR 1312 W. TEHN. 
ST. 11 ».m. — « pjn. TUBS. 



roday's trading poat traat: 
[Free madium soft drink with a 
1,^^^*^, cheese sand%vt)icl) for 
f I 97 Try lunch at our plica, lOCaM 
^ind GUcrest Hall. 

flM, I'M REALLY GOING TO MISS 

rou next quarter. be good 
Love, pumpkin 

[0 ttM Hartford girl from URI - 
biaasa lat ma know if you naad a rWt. 

ive in Magnolia. 

Upha Lambda Delta initiation in 
rman Hall on Dec. 7 all memben 
lust attaod Sunday Praia RaRiriradl I 

icte needed for 2 to Key West or 
»iami anytime aftar Dec 13. Will 
lare S and drivMR. CbN Jayct 
Evenings 575-3223 

fONIGHT at tttc TRADING POST - 
fRY A HOT TilRKry AND CHEESE 
^NDWHKK AN£r A $TEAMfN<J 
lOWL OF SOUP FOR 



rONIGHT at ttta TRADING POST - 
ry a hot turkey and ctieese 
indwhicb and a ata aming bowl of 

far tttlft Pf^MI SHW Utt W:3I 

>.m. 

:ONGRAOULATIONS NEW ALPHA 
:i DELTA IMITATES WE LOVE YA 
NO. 1 PLCOGE CLASS PJ 



/ANTED TO 
:alL 57S-M20 



RECEIVE tmjm 



WONDER HOW MANY PEOPLE 
>EJ THEIR DAILY KICKS FROAA 
EADING THIS CRAP 



SIGAAA PHI'S 
'HY DON'T YOU CLEAN YOUR 
>IRT FROM T HE BRIDGE? 

rOO BAD THE CIVIC CENTER 
ISN'T BEING BUILD WITH THE 
}PEEO THE GOVERNOR'S NiALL 
Is. THE CIVIC CTR. WORKERS 
lEED MORE WHITE CMMSES OR 
•EWER POLITICIA NS. 

lave an idea? A proMam l»af ^^'■•■"J 

Government could solve? Any 

lav— 24 hrs — call Greg KirkpatrJCK 

176 4S26 




■OUND: 14kt. GOLD-FILLED 
lECKLACE ON INTRAMURAL5 

ELD. CALL PEGGY 224 6157. 

losT: Huskyshap mix dog. He's J 
nos old. light colored with husky 
markings on his face. Was wearing • 
caNar wifti tag. Reward. 2343<96 



ound: at FSU-Gville 
/ithdianMindacall 



me geld riofl 
after 5 



lost Wed. In union - red foldi«J 
mbreiia. If found, iMaaaa «aH 
i75-6896. Very imp.! 

" — — ^ . 
-ost: 1 mind. med. size, bro^ *!Z 
urry. If found, kaap It. I don't warn " 
tack. uaad ft anyway- ^ 

.ost: one pair goM-franted 9^*^ 
^hey ware m ttia pocfcat of a 
aincoaf laft In BCM BLDO. I^^Si 

'ou can " — ' • **' 

1310 



KKK on the rise: Bullet for bullet 



(Boyd Lnrla reports mm Hkm KKK «ted 
other poiltkal iM«M far NatkNMl 
Public WBili mi WABE, Atfamta, u 
well Rt ff«r Bcvcral Soathern 
pobHcations.) 

OKOLONA, Miss. — When the 
Ku Kiux Klan resurfaced in its 
hcdsheet battle regalia in this 
riDrtheastern Mississippi farming 
community last spring, a militant 
new breed of black civil rights 
leaders discarded the non-violent 
tactics of Martin Luther King Jr. and 
began returning bullet for bullet. 

Scores of shooting incidents and 
beatings involving both blacks and 
whites have flared in Okolona since 
last February, when marches, rallies 
and boycotts of merchants and the 
local high school were called to 
protest charges of police brutality 
and job discnmination. Marches 
organized last summer by t 
relatively new movemeiit group 
called the United League of Miss- 
issippi were followed or confronted 
by Klan rallies. In Tupelo, 20 miles 
to the north, both sides, heavily 
armed, actually marched from 
oppodng sides of a downtown street 
into one another without Incident ji 
Labor Day confrontation. 

But Tii^>elo, nine times larger tium 
OkokMit aad the laditstfial Bodeus of 
upper Mississippi, has taken the 
face-off between' Ihe Kiln audi ttut 
Ui^ied League as a challeoge to Hs 
somewhat smug reputation as 
Mississippi's most racially tfbenl 
city. As a tesnlt the people of Tupelo 
have begun s|gns of authentic soul- 
seaiching and" apparent progress. 

In Okoiona though, a siege 
mentality is as real as the metal 
fence around Okolona High School, 
closed and locked each school day to 
keep the gun-bearing Klansnen and 
United Leaguers off campus. 

"If any person fires upon us, we 
aren't going to tuck our tails and 
run," says the aptly named Dr. 
Howard Gunn, Okolona organizer for 
the United League. "We're going to 
retaliate with every available 



If any person ever fires 
upon any black pefson 
in this community, we're 
going to blow their 
doggone head ofP —Dr. 
Howard Gunn, United 
League organizer 

resource we have. If any person ever 
fires upon any black person ni this 
community, we're going to blow 
their doggone head off." 

Gunn niade that statement the 
i^ht of Oct. 18 at a rural church 
iomc ten miles south of Okdooa 
after a cark>ad of whites had fired on 
Donald Pack, a black bricklayer and 
Leon Lowery, a black filling station 
operator, on U.S. Highway 45. The 
100 or so persons who had gathered 
to hear a progress report on the 
>sdiooi boycott knew Gunn was not 
engaged in mere rhetorical fkwrlsh. 

Only a few weeks earHer he was in 
his station wagon with his son and 
friends when a group of Klansmen 
opened fire, with shotguns and 
{Mstolil. Gunn fired back and an 
estimated 100 rounds were exchang- 
ed. Miraculously, there was only one 
casualty, a white teenager treated 
and released at the county hospital. 

Gunn, a minister, said a pattern 
has emerged in recent months of 
Klansmen following League demon- 
strators wherever they appear. 
Similar Klan tactics were reported 
this fall at Cullman, Ala., where 
rallies were staged for Tommy Lee 
Hines, a retarded black man on trial 
before an all white jury for the 
alleged rape of a white womaii. 

Skip Robinson, the director of tht 
United League of Mississippi, 
believes these clashes are signaling 
the end of the non-violent civil rights 
movement. 

**We still believe very deeply in- 
what Dr. King meant when he said 
that love and understanding can 
overcome hate and killing," he says. 



"But we don't feel he meant that we 
should be cowards. 

"if the Klan moves into UKf 
neighborhood and shoots aqr 
neighbor, shoots into my hone, I'm 
not going to fall on my knees and usf 
'O Lord, stop him.' God stops man 
through man," Robinson says. "If 
the Klan shoots into my home, if 1 do 
anytinng Vm going to say *0 Lovd, 
help me to aim straight."* 

Robinson is seen as the outside 
agitator in Okolona and Gunn is 
perceived as a maloooteirt by many 
of tile town's whHes, especial^ the 
merchants who have been suffering 
significant economic danuige as a 
result of the bbck boycott 

"The press, even reporters from 
The Tupelo Daily Journal, or The 
Jackson Clarion Ledger^ «e roundly 
despised in Okolona for covering the 
troubles of the community. 

Okokma's weekly newspaper. The 
Messenger, carrM only official 
statements, curfew announcements 
and court declstons. Like most white 
Okokmans the paper's edte refused 
to be interviewed. 

One resiitent who. would talk was 
Rev. Claude Johnson, pastor of the 
town's First United Methodist 
Church. The church stands between 
the genteel, peeling, tum-of-the- 
century business district and the 
gaudy neo-Tara mansion constructed 
by Mayor Richard Stovidl. A large 
black circle marks the site of a Klan 
cross burning on the churdi's front 
lawn. 

Johnson's church is about the only 
middle ground for blacks and whites 
in Okolona. Each Sunday afternoon, 
Johnson convenes a generalized 
prayer meeting, group therapy 
session, and gospel sing. At first 
only whites attended,^sald Johnson, 
so an announcement was placed in 
The Messenger and by the tiiird 
meeting, blacks had begun to meet 
in the white church, something that 
had never -happened before. 

"People were afraid of what might 
take place, of violence getting 
started and getting out of hand," 
sa^ tiie white pastor in his study. 



In Brief 



in Briaf palicy: The Flambeau In Brief section, bacauM 
of limitad space, does net print noNcaa of i apilar 

meetings of membership groups. Unless pre-registratfon 
ia required, nrMming events will be announced tlte 



THE LAST DAY for submisskm of 
articles, art work or classes for the winter 
quarter CPE catalog will be Friday, Dec. 8. 

"CHRISTMAS ALTERNATIVES" wttl 
be the theme of tonight's supper seminar 
at the United Ministries Center, 548 W. 
Park Ave. The seminar will begin at 5:30 
p.m. 

CCIS WILL SPONSOR a resume 
writing clinic tonight at 6:30 in Room 110 
Bryan Hall. 

ALL SENIORS who did not receive an 
appointment card to get their yearbook 
portrait taken can pick one up either at the 
table in the Union Courtyard or at the 
information desk in the Union^s second 
floor lounge today and tomorrow. 

CPE NATURAL SUNDAYS class will 
meet tonight at 7:30 in Room 115 Bellamy 
to discuss plans for Friday's covered dish 
dinner. 



day as tttay acofir^ Only one notice will be run of each 
avent, andall events must be open to the public. Notices 
will natbataicen by telephone, but must be mailed to The 
Flambeau at FSU Bok U-7001 or delivered to lha 
Flambeau office at KM N. Woodward Ava. by 1 p.nt. lha 
day before they are due to run. All notices should include 
day, tinna, place, coat, if any, and a contact number for 
THamambaao.'ANHamaaraaublacflar " 




Skies will be cloudy today and tonight, 
with occasional rain and a chance of 
thundershowers. Tomorrow will see some 
clearing, following the drop in tempera- 
tures last night. The high today will be 
around 70 with the low tonight in the mid 
40s. The rain probability for today is 40 
percent. Winds will be northerly at 10 to 15 
m.p.h. 





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wodd today when he ^teo saki of)e our chief aims is to 
"make others misskKianes 

Each generation must ask others to follow as apostles, as 
missionaries. This is the process of renewal, so vital to the 
contemporary Church. Are you called to be an apostle, to 
serve as a missk>nary? 

Trinity Missk>ns is seeking young men who want to 
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S ports 



Rivers' 26 points leads 
Lady 'Noles over UF, 88-79 



Led by shtfpshooter Qierry Rivers, the 
FSU wonieii's basketball team captured an 
89-79 victory over Florida last ni^ in 

Tuflly Ciyfli. 

Rivers, with her best performanoe of 
the year, tossed in 26 pcnnts to lead all 
scorers. In so doing she negated a briBiaad 
effort by the Gator's Dereen Landed. 
Landolfi, a sophomore that was infured 
most of last season, bagged 24 points while 
playing only three quarters of the game* 

FSU coach Diane Murphy, hei^hig 
praise on her assistant coaches and 
players, felt the (fifiference was character. 

•^^e' played two good halves of 
basketball," Murphy noted, alluding to her 
team's inconsistency this year. 

The Seminoles never led by more than 
ten, attaining that margin twice in the 
closing moments. A Florida surge, 
however, tied the game 69-69 with 5:29 
left. After trading points for several 
minutes, the Seminoles went on top for 
good with consecutive buckets by Darlene 
Shannon, Laine JLasseter, and Jackie 
Arnold. 

Florida coach, Cathy Davis, who had to 
be restrained by her players at one 4)oint, 
was visibly upset with the officiating. 
"Fve never seen such sorry officiating,'* 




Cherry Rivers 

. . shown in action last season. Rivers 
connected for 26 tost night 

she said. "These two guys missed a great 
game." 

Other Seminoles in double figures 
included Darlene Shannon (15 pts.), Jackie 
Arnold (16 pts.) and Laine Lasseter (10 
pts.). Gators Kim Hoyt and Quintella 
Bonner both added 13 points. 



FSU outlasts Auburn, 71-70 



from staff reports 

Ed Chatman made his first free throw of 
the evening with two seconds left in the 
game to give Flmda State a 71-70 victory 
over Auburn last night. 

With the scoK tied at 70, Auburn had 
ten secmids to get off the winning shot. 



but committed an offensive foul against 
Chatman with only two seconds left. 

The Seminoles, led by Murray Brown 
with an incredible 41 points, were ahead 
for most of the game until Auburn made a 
ran late and went ahead 69-68 with a little 
over two minutes left iii the game. 



Gators choose Clemson's Pell 
to become Dicke/s successor 



GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) — Charley 
Pell, coach of the Gator Bowl-bound 
Clemson Tigers, will succeed Doug Dickey 
as University of Florida head football coach, 
UF President Robert Q. Marston announced 
Monday. 

Pell, 37, who completed an 18-4-1 record 
in two years at Clemson and has a 51-17-2 
overall coaching record, met with Marston 
Monday at the Greeville-Spartanhuig, S.C. 
Jetport. 

"My choice of those (canidates for the 
job) available is Mr. Charles Byron Pell," 
Marston said in a statement issued by his 
Gainesvflle office following the South 
Carolina meetiag. **Ch«rley has accepted. 

**He is a young mtn of proven absity, ki 



our discussioif, he has convinced me that he 
insists on proper emphasis on academic 
progress for his players and in having 
coaches and players the appropriate 
representatives of the unversity. 

"Most of all, 1 believe that he has the 
best chance in this very chancy business to 
moHfize effective support for our football 
program for the Uahrersity of Florida^** 

PeO, from Albertville, Ala., served as 
head coach at Jacksonville, (Ala.) State 
from 1%9 through 1973 before going to 
Virginia Polytechnic as defensive coordina- 
tor in 1974. He joined the Clemson staff as 
an assistant in Deoenriier 1975 and was 
named head coach a year later. 



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Deoeinbcf 6^ 1978 




Stnring Tallahaaaee for M yMis 



Iranian religious leader killed; 
thousands of troops on alert 



by sylvana f oa 



TEHRAHr kan — Thousands of imperial 
troops weot on alert thtoughoot the capital 
yesterday, fearful^that the gan battle death 
of a powerful teligknis leader woqM sparit 
new bloody rioting. 

In the southen oilfields, thqusaads more 
workers wafted off their jobs, bringing the 
total on strike to some 40 percent of the 
work force and drastically reducing 
pi^uction. 

Opponents of Shah Mohammed Reza 
Pahlavi, charging high level corruption, 
have been demonstrating against his reglne 
for months. The latest troubles flared at the 
start of the annual Moslem mourning period 
of Moharam. 

Diplomats said they expect the street 
violence to climax about Dec. 10 near the 
end of the mourning when believers work 
themselves into a grief stricken frenzy with 



public setf-fli^Uatioa r^. 

Reports from the Persicm Gulf port city of 
Busher said a powerful Moslem kader; 
Sheikh Abu Ashvri, was killed outside his 
Inmie late Monday night during a gun battle 
between police and the sheU'^ supporters. 

Sottfces said the shefth had been nnaking. 
anti-shah speeches in the mosque and a 
warrant had been issued for his arrest. The 
clash began when police surrounded his 

Local protest today 

The Coalition for Iranian Democracy and 
Independeiice has scheduled a series of 
marches and rallies today, beginning at 11 
a.m. in FSU's Mtwre Auditorium, followed 
by a 12:30 p.m. march on Westcott, a 1:30 
p.m. rally at FAMU and another assembly 
at Westcott at 3 p.m. 



home. The slieikh and ooe poioe Meet 
wtf€ kifled. 

Diplomats said the sheikh's death might 
well re-ignite the fury that resulted in 
bUK)dy rioting, widespread arson and 
looting last month. 

Thousands of armed soldiers took up 
positions along Tehran's boulevards and 
intersections and scores of armored 
personnel carriers roHed through the 
streets, apparently headed for the palace of 
the 58-vear-old shah. The shah was not 
believed to be at the palace — widespread 
rumors said he and his family were ai their 
vacation resort on the Persion Gulf island of 
Kish. 

Hundreds of other soldiers with fixed 
bayonets entrenched themseWes around 
Tehran's, six mile square grand bazaar to 
isolate protestors. 



Cabinet postpones decision on budget 



by dennia mulqueen 

flamiMM staff wrMar 

The Florida Cabinet yesterday put off a 
decision on just how good a university 
system it wants as it postponed for the 
second lime a vote on how much taxpayers 
money it feels the universities should get. 

Commissioner of Education Ralph 
Turlington, in his budget proposal before 
the Cabinet, has recommended $560 million 
for the upcoming two years. Board of 
Regents Chancellor E.T. York has 
recommended $682 million, or $12.1 million 
more than Turlington. 

York has said Turiington's budget 
proposal would seriously jeopardize the 
level of quality Florida's universities are 
striving to achieve. Turlington said the state 
simply can't afford the money York wants. 

The Cabinet sits as the state Board of 
Education, and will submit its recommenda- 
tion to the kgislamre. which ultimately will 
decide how moch money the oaiv^Ues 
will get. 

Gov. Reubin Askew said after the 
raeetk^, however, that if a vote were taken 
then, he would opt for sending both York's 
and Tuf^oii's requests to the legislature 
umoiiched as hasbeea doaeia the past, aad 

lei it decide. 

Askew predicted that this is what wUI 
happen at the next Cabinet mieeting. the 
final on^ for Mn ittd im^i Secretary of 

Stale Jesse McCrary and Attorney General 



Robert Shevm. 

**The tncoihing governor (Bob Graham) 
Should have an opportunity to examine it 
(the education bucket) himself," Askew 
said in d^andtog hls^ dfsne to take no 
action on tfie matter. The Cabtnet's faactloii 
as the state Board of Education has been 
criticized in the past as natHy ceftmbnlal. 
Gov.-elect Graham has promised^to involve 
the Cabinet mote is hard policy dedriaas. 

in drafting their budget, ^tocatioa 
Department ofRclals said they took mto 
account the so-odled "taxpayers revolt" 
and Gov.*elect Graham's tax-fteeae 
proposal, which is sure to cat up a ak»able 
portion of the state's predicted surplus. 
Askew put the surplus al $400 mifliim 

According to York, the Issue depemls oa 
•how much quality- the state wants (in Its 
universities)." 

*This is not a business-as-usoal budget 
request." York said, '^but a budget aimed 
at making substantial improvements in the 
State University System — improvements 
badlv needed and long overdue." 

To plead his case before the Cabinet, 
York brought in Co-Chairpersons George 
Baugham and Don Reed of the Commission 
on the Future of Florida's Universities, and 
others. 

The commission released a report last 




In conference 

Ymk ftaihfa iriaaillMr mffmiiw ofth& 

mWKww^ BlPmwwiW^^iP •wiwmiPWPiPeM» ^tMi^WhIP^ w»w»y wp» ■wmw^m 



Policy sciences 
coordinator 

deddes to res^ 



Dr. ThonMS Dye, looiitiaalMW of PSU*s 
center of eaccfl e iice la poficy idMBca, 
doesn't waat the job anymore. 
- **As far as the day-to-day administration 

of the program. I'd like to get someone else 

to handle that," Dye said yesterday. He 
added he wants to remain m FSL's policy 
science program. 

FSU received $400,000 this year from the 
Board of Regents to establish a policy 
sciences center as part of the Board's 
efforts to bring national prominence to State 
University System schools. 

Dye denied unconfirmed reports that a 
difference of opinion with FSU policy 
science center Director Warren Mazek. 
dean of FSU's college of social science, led 
to his decision to step down. Mazek refused 




Thomas Dye 



several times yesterday to talk to The 
Flambeau. 

Dye last year was voted the third most 
influential political scientist in America in a 
poll of his peers conducted by "PS: The 
Journal of the American Political Science 
Association." He was chairperson of the 
FSU government department from 1969-72. 

Dye said he does not plan to step down 
immediately, but wants to spend more tone 
teadiing and researching ratlKer than actib^ 
as an administrator. 

"Administration is a chore, and I happen 
to be one of the numy people who don't like 
to do it." he said. 

Dye told The Bambeaa la October he 
would like to see the center progress faster. 
He also said that ''trying to administer a 
program at this universitsr ia Ika tiyia§ to 
swtro in miQroimatse." 

The policy sciences center was 
established to study the social poftcies of 
goveriBaient and their impact on society by 
looking at specific policies sach as taxes, 
land use and fsnuly planning. 

A liD quarter piogress report by Dye 

out SIO.OOO to FSU faculty to researdi 
topics Hke the tai revolt tn Florida aad the 

programs. 

The center also has swv aye d Florida 
■ ti t ega to d U c ova r whv ttmv lelcctod of 
approved die const itutlooal revlsloii. aad 

a^^^^u, .^A^^^^A ^A^^bm #^aa a^^ni^Mai ■SIphSi mMttaiflmiima 

mwi^^^^', WK^^i^w w^ti^Hfm ^^Wm ^^^^mi^^p'^B mp^aw i^B^^miwap^aB 




2 / WedneMiay, Decomft>er6, 1978 FLORIDA FUMMBEAU 



Special session will focus on environmental issues 



by dennis mulqueon 

flambeau staff writer 

Florida's first-term legislators start 
learning the ropes of the legislative process 
fodav as they and their incumbent 
colleagues tackle a special session agenda 
that has swelled to seven items. 

Gov. Reubin Askew originally called the 
three-day special session to redefine the 
Green Swamp and the Florida Keys as areas 
uf critical state concern. A recent Supreme 
Court decision over-ruled a Florida law 
protecting those areas. 

Askew tacked another euvironmenta] 
issue ^to the ageada yesterday, this one 
dealing with a Florida Uiw designatuig 
Biscayne Bay as an aquatic preserve. The 



law forbids the construction of upland 
canals in rhe area and according to the 
Deparrmenr of Environmental Regulation, 
canals may have a beneficial effect on the 
area. 

The House Natural Resources Commit- 
tee, which met yesterday, already approved 
a bill designating the Green Swamp, near 
Orlando, and the Keys, as areas of critical 
state concern. 

The House bill calls for strii^nt 
developmental regulations in these areas, 
and also would establish a committee to 
determine how and why such critical areas 
are deslgaaied la the future. 

Other issues on the agenda are: 

•Extension of the date of the Florida 



Lighting Efficiency code and the Thermal 
Efficiency code. Askew said the delay is 
necessary **so that contractors and building 
inspectors may have additional time to 
prepare for the new ctxles.** 

•Repeal of the Mentally Disordered Sex 
Offenders Act, which was passed by the 
legislature in the final moments of the last 
session. Lawmakers are expected to 
suspend the law, which allows mentally 
disordered sex offenders to partictpate la 
work-release programs, ^ouse Crin^ial 
Justice Chairperaoa Bob Crawford, 
D^Winter Haven, is preparing a bill tliat 
would discootliroe the prograia. Pttlific 
opposlrion to the program prompted Askew 
to include it on the agenda. 



•Change a Florida law defwing 
businesses." 

•Confirmation of various Askew 
appointments, which include state Budget 
Director Joe Cresse and Titusville City 
Councilman Gerald Guater to the Pablc 
Service Commission. 

•Inclusion in a 1978 legislative biU 
providing for tax exemptions oa machioerv 
and equipment fat aew businesses a 
deflnttion for **new business." "The 
measure never defmed a *new business,*" 
aocotdiag to^ Askew. 'Thb needs to be 
clarified and dearly defined.** 

•Approval of a proposal to change the 
name of Florida Technological University tu 
the Uatversity of Central Florida. 



House Minority leader urges single member districts 



by dmnis mulqiiMn 

flambeau staff writer 

House Mimmty Leader Curt Kiser said 
yesterday he has pre-filed^a bill in the 
House callmg for stagle member legislative 
<fi8tricts de^te tiie iKt voters rejected an 
ictentical measure in tiie Noiv. 7 general 
electitHi. 

Kiser said voters rejected eonstitution 
revisicm 3, cootaining the single member 
district provision, because it appeared on 
the ballot with ''naraerous amendments 
which were both confusing and emotloiial.** 

Placing it on the ballot separate from 
such items as casino gambling and the 
mini-ERA will give Floridians an 
opportunity to impartially evaluate the 
merits of the concept, he said. 

Reapportionment has been a much- 
debated issue in the Florida legislature and 
some legislators have claimed the division 
of legislative districts discriminates against 
minorities and in particular Republicans, 



and allows lawmakers to set boundaries 
ensurmg their re-election. 

Currently, districts are a function of the 
population within that area and thus some 
heavily populated districts have more than 
one member. If the di^ict also is heavily 
partisan, propoiieats of single member 
districts contends one party the other 
receives vmfmr ofm-Hrepresoiialion. 

Kiser siud tiiere is strong bi-partisan 
support for his bill. In the Senate, according 
to Kiser. key Sens. Phil Lewis. D-West 
Palm Beach, and Dempsey Barron. 
D-Panama City, have indicated a measure 
of support for the measure which will be 
debated in the upcoming spring session. 

Chairperson of the state Etemocratic 
party, Alfredo Duran, said in a statement 
released Monday that his party will work 
hard for single-member apportionment in 
the upcoming months. 

"Single member districting would be the 
one thing that could both lower the cost of 



campaigning and bring the people closer 
to their elected representatives,*' Duran 
said. **There is too much oonfusion in the 
minds of many voters as to who their 
representatives are . ' ' 

Like Kiser. Duran feels revision 3 failed 
because it was lumped together with eight 
others. 

'*Most voters were bombarded with the 
revisions and apparently voted against afl of 
them, thinking that all of them were bad,*' 
he said. 

The Central Committee of the Flor^ 
Democratic Party has submitted a 
resolution to the Democratic National Party 

in support of the concept. 

Kiser*s bill is co-sponsored by Reps. Bob 

Hector, D-Miami; Frank Mann, D-Fort ^ 
Myers: William Sadowski, D-Miami; Arnet ° 
Giradcau. D- Jacksonville; Joseph Gersten, 
D-Miami; and others. 

Kiser said Sen. John Ware, R-St. 
Petersburg, will sponsor an equivalent bill. 



2- 

«0 

b 



a 




Rep. Curtis Kizer 



MCAT . GR[ • OAT 

OCAT • GMAT 
SAT • VAT . LSAT . 



Register Now 

Jan.8 
for Feb; exam 



•i 



STANLEY H KAPLAN 

EDUCATIONAL CENTER 



309 Office Plaza 
Tallahassee, Fla. 
: 877-0010 




^4 _ 

custom A s-.Wcc 4«weW^ 



FINAL EXAMINATION SCHCEHilX FALL QUARTER 1978 

This is the same final exam schedule that appeared in the schedule ol classes, but with common course numbering for block exams. 



EXAM TIME 
7:30-9:30 a.111. 



MONDAY 



TUESDAY 



PHY 1025, 2040C, 2041C, TR 9:05 a.m. 

2042C, 3050e, 3051C 

30520,3123 



WEDNESDAY 
MWF 3:35 p.m. 



10:00-12:00 N 



12:30-2:30 p.m. 



3:00-5:00 p.m. 



5:30-7:30 p.m. 



8:00-10:00 p.m. 



MWF 8:00 a.m. 



ECO 2011, 2021, 2031 



TR 12:20 p.m. 



MWF 9:05 a.m. 



THURSDAY 

ACC 2001, 2021 
ACC 3301 
FIN 3403 

TR 11:15 a.m. 
MIL 



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MAT 1033, MAC 1141 MWF 2:30 p.m. 
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I • • « 



, « * • • • 



FLORfDA FLAMBEAU Wednesdav DerP'T>N.f 6 1071! ' 



UFF presents dernarJ for salary structure to BOR 



by Howard libin 

flambeau staff wntw 

The State-Wide faculty union will present 
its demands for this year's contract 
revisions today at a meeting with the Board 
ol Regents at 9:30 a.m. in the FAMU's 
Coleman Library. 

The collective bargaining agreement 
between the United Faculty of Florida and 
the BOR calls for financial issues to be 
re-negotiated each year. 

The union bargaining team headed by 
Walter Mercer, president of the FAMU 
chapter of UFF. oonseqneiitly wfll" be 



limited to salary and fringe beaefit « 

Union officiids say ttwjr aie plaHuag to 
push for tlie eatabtfsluDeirt of m salary 
structure, which would set salwy 
mMumums and aflow for pay increases eacfe 
year facutty members reaiaiB in tiw ^slen. 
The uaioB team pushed such a policy last 
year, hot failed to wis its adoption. 

''The salary stractnve would establish 
different ranks, one for each year a lM»ity 
member stoyed on.'* said Jim BMifield. a 
member of tiie FSU bargainmg leatt. "A 
professor wonld advance a rank each year, 
and conid be advanced additional ranks as a 



Flowers, card ease 
P-nut man's agony 



by chrte brockman 



A pot of flowers and an anonymous 
card are going to make Paul the P-nut 
man's stay in the hospital a little bit 
easier. 

Paul Smith, 53, better known to 
students and facuhy as "Ole Paul, the 
students' friend," will be admitted to the 
Veterans Administration Hospital in Lake 
City this morning. He is in to undergo 
examinations and tests to determine the 
extent of damage caused by his diabetic 
condition. The condition, called diabetic 
neuropathy, forced Paul to close up his 
FSU peanut and fruit stand Nov. 9. 

"I never expected to hear from any of 
the students again, much less receive a 
gift from them. This was a wonderful 
gesture and I love and appreciate the 
students for their concern," Paul said of 
the flowers he received last week. 

Those flowers, and an anonymous card 
signed simply "from the students," were 
sent to Paul by FSU student Ann 
Bordman. 




Ole Paul 

"1 missed not having him there, and 1 
just w anted to show him that the students 
cared about him," she said. "I used to 
visit him two or three times a week. 
Whenever I was in a bad noood he would 
cheer me up." 

Diabetic neuropathy is a cardio-vascu- 
lar disease. It impairs circulation and cuts 
off the oxygen-rich blood in parts of the 
body furthest from the heart. Paul's 
condition started in his toes, which began 
to go numb about 5 years ago. Since then 
the disease has moved up through his 
feet and legs to his hip joint. 

"After the examinations and tests, the 
doctors will either release me or I'll have 
to stay in and have surgery on my hips, 
but I'm hoping that won't happen." Paul 
added. 



Cabinet from page 1 



summer indioiting that Florida's higher 
education system lags far behind that of 
other states in terms of qoaHty. 

The report, which was the product of 18 
mcmths of efforts by 31 volunteers, 
concluded that the state's itniversities have 
sulRdent physical ^Millties, but need to 
drastically upgrade theur quality. 

Florida's univmltl^ provide a "bricks 
and mortar accessibflity," Reed said, but 
lack the sofrfdstlcated researdi fKifities 
necessary to attract outside industry. 

**The question of economic development 
is directly related to the quality of omr 
higher education system." Reed said. 

"Believe you me, I want tiUs to be die 
year of the Regents." Insurance 
Commissioner Bill Gunter said, "but the 
heart-rending thing is we are required to 
set our priorities within the ramifications of 
our available resources.*' 

Reed responded that educatimi should 
remain a top priority nonetheless. 

"If the public policy decision is to 
provide higher quality higher education, 
funding is the answer," Reed said. One of" 
(he fmdings of the report, he pointed out, 
is that the University of Illinois alone has 
more volumes in its library than are 
contained in all nine of Florida's 



m 

universities. 
Reed also mentioned thai in the last 



year, the California state university system 
received $251 million more in federal 
research dollars than Florida, although the 
two systems have the same number of 
campuses (nine) and af^rosimately the 
same enrollments. 

Turlington, whose budget doesn't call 
for any new positions, complained that 
York's request includes 3,072 new 
employees. 

Joe Staford, BOR Vice-Chancellor for 
Planning and Budgeting, said the system 
expects 3,660 new students over the two 
year period through 1981, or the current 
enrollment oi the University of West 
Florida. 

More than $66 million of York's 
proposed budget is for the purchase of 
scientific and technical equipment. The 
Commissioner of Eteaition r ecoau n endcd 

about f9 miffion. 

Secretary of State Jessie McCrary said it 
is merely a question of when die stale 
wiuits to ap p ro p r ia te the money necessary 
to achieve the level of quatity the R^ei^ 
are seeking. 

**Why should we precede trymg to get 
that money when it's there?" hkCrary 
asked. He was referii^ to the state's 
cuneat surplus, whkii he said not be 

there in the future. 
The Cabinet also appfoved changing the 

name of Fletflda Tcdnologieal IMpersity 
to the Uiriversity of CeMrai Flsilda. 



reward for 
The 



of 5 peroeat, nooofding to a 



LastyearUFFrecptosteda 15 percent pay 
luke, but after nearly nine months of 
the union was granted 6 



Hie Regents are not expected to offer 
their first proposal at His meeting. 

Ceaser Naples, chief negotiator for the 
Board, said that he doesn't expect the union 
to demand a set percentage increase. 

**We expect the union salary demand to 



he a ooMpOsite of chffetcnt elements.** he 
said. **They want a salary structure and 
probably increases tied to inflation.** 

Naples added that he doubts the oiuon 
will aks for any specific fringe benefits at 
this meeting, rather that it wil wait for a 
joint UFF BOR ooounittee fupait to he 
finished later this 



Hox^ever. union representatives had 
indicated earlier that changes in faculty 
insurance plans and fewer required vears 
until pensions are guaranteed are frmge 
benefits they want. 



Yearbook photos now being taken 




^sid ties* hut 



wS he provided far 



Now ^ the tlaw ior 
leaiws to have ttwlr 
recorded for the revived 

The 1978-79 Senior leooid yeail 
first since 1971. is being sponso red 
honorary service ctob Alpha BeH 
add^an to plaiteniaphi 
out the year, aB aeateis 



^ tihe 
by die 
OL la 



may 

no dnrse and be inchided in the 
a brief biopi^hy of their coflege 

A photognqilier wfll he at FSU 
tinough Tuesday to take die photos 
An appmntflMnt nwat he ntede 
inforinatifHi lounge on the second 
the Union. Men are asked to 



uMI to 
at 



iir free, 
la the 



reaaoaable price fnm the photographer 
ailer viewing the prints. 

The only time the 1978-79 yeartKH>ks can 
be ordered is at this photo session, but you 
don't have to be a senior to buy one. The 
cost of the yearbook is S6.45. but add S1.25 
if the copy is to be mailed. 

Gail Ferryman is editor of the yearbook. 
She asks that anyone interested in 
contributing material, photos, energy 
or enthusiam contact her in care of Alpha 
Beta Chi through the campus mail at Box 
6471. 




Students Enrolled in Business Courses 

IMPORTANT N 

Beginning Winter Quarter all Business 

Students enrdied In Undergraduate Business 
Courses MUST attend the first class meeting 
or notify the departmental office in writing 
prior to the first class meeting in order to 
retain their space in the c4as$. 



629 w. 

Tennessee 
2Mail3 



Tasty PSastry 



Bakery 



1415 

Timberlane RcLl 

ai34ISI 



X-MAS SPECIALS: 

Cut out X-MAS cookies ....$1.35/doz. 

Decorated X-MAS cupcakes^$1.95 

doz. 

% sheet X-MAS cake«..$5.50 



i^fer good WecL ihrn SmU 

Parking nnore accessable from 7 a.m. to fO 8.ifi. tat T«nn. loca tion; 
also good at our Tunbertane location — which is opan til 9 p.m. 



I 



4 ' Wednesday December 6, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 




Florida. 




H ''^ C!.^rlev . goodbye Doug 



The shaft 



The Uaiversity of Fkinda has a new head football coach 
^ Charl^ FeU, Qemsoii's tried and true winiier. Perhaps 
we should say Charley Pell, aemson's former tried and 
true winner. 

Either way, we're having a difficult time figuring out 
why Pell would want to come to Ftorida after the treatnient 
his predecessor, Doug DidLey, just received from the loyal 
Florida alumni. 

It's called the shaft, and it's what Dickey got but good 
from his alma mater last week, the school where he has 
coached for the last nine years. Despite strong support 
from his football team — the young men Didcey was 
charged with tutoring on the gridiron — a block of 
influential Gator alumni decided nine years of Dickey and 
still no Southeastern Conference championship was more 
than then: little egos could handle. 

Fh^t they mustered a whopping $300,000 to buy up the 
next three^ears of Dickey's contract. Then, out of another 
fund, they hired someone to work the marionette strings 
on UF President Robert Marston and to guide Marston's 
puppet hand through a sappy letter explaining why he 
shouldn't fire Dickey then telling the coach he was fired 
anyway. 

The whole affair was quite similar to the Darrell Mudra 
affair in which Mudra, head football coach before the 
popular Bobby Bowden at FSU, fell victim to the cloak and 
4*gger politics of former FSU President Stanley Marshatt, 
influential FSU alumnus Jim Smith (Florida's new 
attorney general) and others whose names were never 
publicized at the time. 

Buying up Mudra's contract only cost the FSU alumni 
about490»000. They got off cheap. Or was it their actions 
that were cheap? We forget. 

Anyway, it is an unfortunate set of priorities the alumni 
at both schools apparently have established. 

To quote state Senator Jack Gordon, who criticized 
Marston for his role in Dickey's fuing: **He's out raising 
$300,000 to replace a football coach, and yet he can't raise 
the money to put 100,000 books on the library shelves." 

A number of new books remain in their boxes at UF 
because funds have run out to pay graduate students 
whose job it is to shelve them. 

Why hot keep Dickey as the players said they wanted 
and get the alumni to toss in the bucks needed to shelve 
library books? Surely the students at UF would benefit 
more from a boon to research than they will from that 
boner in football and after all, isn't the educatbn of 
students the paramount function of a university? Isn't it 
for the purpose of education and not so much for football 
(is this heresy?) that we have institutions of higher 
learning? 

We've always thought that was the case, though it's 
highly possible that somewhere between the firings of 
Dirrell Mudra and Doug Dickey alumni with brains the 
consbtency of pigskin somehow managed to reverse the 
order. We like to think not, but the latest indications do 
seem to point in that direction. 



Florida Flambeau Foundation Inc. business and advertising office 206 N. 
Woodward Avenue, phone 644-4075; Newsroom 204 N. Woodward Avenue, 
phone 644-5606; Production /Mediatype lab 314 University Union, phone 
•H-6M4; Classified ad office 306 University Union phone 644-5785. Mailing 



THE MANY HATS OF FIDEL CASTBO: 




wmmm 






mm 




AFRICA 




mm 



New priorities needed in sports 



Guest Column 



by neal friedman 

special fo llie flambMu 

(Neal Friedman is student body 
president at FSU.) 

This time of the year has 
always been a time for thanks. 
Sandwiched between Thanks- 
giving and Christmas, the holiday 
spirit is hard to miss. 

From my perspective, I must 
take this time to thank Coach 
Bowden, his staff, and the entire 
team for a tremendous season. 
The excitement of the team has 
given all of us temporary relief 
from the problems we face each 
day. 

However, in all the excitement 
of victory, the Wally Woodham 
and Itfiimy Jordan touchdown 
passes, the Mark Lyles and 
Homes Johnson runs, and Ron 
Simmons and Willie Jones 
tackles, I kept thinking about 
the athletic budget and getting 
more depressed. 

Any student who attended FSU 
last spring or summer should be 
aware of the battles SG fought 
over its *78-*79 budget with Dr. 
Sliger. The crux of the argument 
was the level of funding of 
intercollegiate athletics (ICA). 
The end result of the argument 
was a two-pronged compromise. 
Part one was SG getting back 
$20,000 out of the original 
$60,000 veto by Sliger. Part two 
was an agreement between SG 
and the administration which 
meant SG would share in any 
money generated by the athletic 
department over and above its 
projected 78- '79 budget. 

In light of the fact that the Navy 
game was televised and brought 
in $200,000 that had not been 
in the original ICA projected 
revenue budget, this agreement 
must now be implemented. My 
position, and the position of many 
people in student government, is 
that $50,000 of this money should 
t«w{«F tjia^fpniaining SSOjOOO. 
deficit in the *7ft.'79 ICiTbudget. 




Until the Navy game it was 
assumed that SG would cover for 
this deficit during our midyear 
allocations in January. The TV 
money put to cover the deficit 
would certainly be acceptable as a 
fulfillment of this agreement. 

Instead of jumping for joy 
about our athletic budget and the 
new money, I said earlier I was 
getting depressed thinking about 
athletics. I don't know when or 
how it happened, but the 
chemistry of thinking about ABC 
televised games, and bowl 
games, and the effect oa the ICA 
biid^t crystattized my thinking 
about the trae nature of the 
funding of ICA. My thinking is 
this: in otder to bttkmce Hs 
budget, our ICA program now 
needs a TV or bowl game to pull H 
through. Thus forces out»de FSU 
determine wh e th er or not the 
l^dget balances irt the end of the 
year. Leverage like diis, I fed, 
equals control of our program. 

Don't get shocked foHcs! FSU » 
in good company. Our situation of 
foreign ownership is probably 
shared by three-fourths of the 
athletic programs nationwide! 
Here is the total FSU situation 
this year: Reflecting back on the 
original ICA budget, I remember- 
ed the $200,000 from the Miami- 
FSU televised game was already 
included in the budget that could 
not be balanced without a $50,000 
allocation from SG at midyear. 
Assuming my math is correct, 
this means the FSU ICA budget 
would have shown a deficit of 
$250,000 this year if the ABC 
cameras hadn't pointed at the 
Seminoles twice. 

Last year our ICA program 
would also have shown a deficit if 
the benevolent eyes of both the 
Tangerine Bowl Selection Com- 
mittee, and ABC hadn't looked to 
FSU. 

Having a good idea of the ICA 
•••^^uiding mechanism, the heaviest 
brunt of making ttds defied 



would have been the A&S fiinds 
that SG allocates. That is why, in 
this the season to give thanks. I 
am thanking the FSL fotiiball 
team and ABC for pulling is 
through. 

But what about next \car. or 
the next, or five years from now'' 
What happens if a year hits when 
FSU has no television games or 
bowl games? I hope you arc 
getting the idea that forces 
outside Tallahassee not only 
control the livelihood of ICA at 
FSU, but also the amount of A&S 
money SG can allocate to various 
support functions around campus 
in addition to ICA (what about 
entertainment?) 

I wrote a memo to Dr. Sliger 
hist year eipressing my concern 
about the enormous amount of 
mcmey ICA needs to operate and 
the minimal amount of funds 
iHrayi^le to do it. WHk a women's 
athletic program appropriately 
asking ftnr more and iBore money, 
^ tune to make tou^ decisions 
is now. 

We luve to take a hard kx)k at 
die atfatetic budget and see what 
we can realistically fund. We 
have to prioritize the programs 
we now fund in ICA. The 
experience of constructing an K^A 
budget that cannot be constructed 
on accountable money is a 
harrowing experience. It is 
tantamount to Russian Roulette. 
It is a simple fact that FSU docs 
not have the funding resources to 
tap that Notre Dame, Ohio State, 
or even the University of Florida, 
has. We don't have as much 
student activity money, booster 
money, or generated revenue. It 
is ludicrous to believe that we do. 
It then follows suit that we have to 
make decisions as to what sports 
we want to compete nationally on 
and budget appropriately, and 
what sports we do not want to 
compete nationally, and budget 
appropriately. 

From the perspective of a 
student body president who has 
spent a great deal of time 
thinking about the financing of 
CA, ■•w - caukL .be > Ihfe anast 

opportune ttme. 



L 



Cr 



Editor: 

This U 
Bernard 

In the] 
unjusiii 
dcmonsti 
NON IS 

address 
that coi 
comnutt^ 



Sb 



Up 
contradij 
shah to 
there hal 
argumei 
under 
religioui 
in life is| 
Before 
might b< 
had to s| 

In a 
Walters] 
stated 
viewini 
inferior 
tragicoi 
as the s] 
at his 
percei II 
remark 

In 
Mike 
mambld 
not a sei 
point 
Allah, n| 



No 

Editor: 

The nj 
Vietnam) 
States ei 
steeped 
tmperatij 
mllitar> 
regime 
cxperieri 
Both II 
Pentago 
Vkinaml 
Vietnam 
for nai 
national 
commui 
no lon^ci 
to dcpl 
nation 
Hence . 
find if u' 
under :t I 

Th. 
would rt 




ports 

[e been the A&S funds 
pocates. That is why. in 
•ason to give thanlts, I 
ing the FSU football 
ABC for pulling is 

It about next year, or 
>r five years from now? 
)ens if a year hits when 
lo television games or 
les? i hope you are 
ie idea that forces 
allahassee not only 
' lihood of ICA at 
ilso the amount of A&S 
can aUocate to various 
[notions around cani|Nis 

to iCA {what aboot 
lent?) 

a mmo to Dr. Sliger 
^xpmsing my concern 
enormous aoMmnt of 
needs to operate aad 
lal amount isi htads 
do tt.W^ a women's 
)rogram appropriately 
I more aiul mofe mcMMy # 
make tough decisions 

to take a hard look at 
c budget and see what 
ealistically fund. We 
rioritize the programs 
fund in ICA. The 
of constructing an ICA 
t cannot be constructed 
ntable money is a 
experience. It is 
to Russian Roulette. 
|plc fact that FSU does 
e funding resources to 
)trc Dame, Ohio State, 
University of Florida, 
don't have as much 
tivity money, booster 
generated revenue. It 
s to believe that we do. 
)ws suit that we have to 
ions as to what sports 
compete nationally on 
;et appropriately, and 
s we do not want to 
ationally, and budget 
ely. 

he perspective of a 
dy president who has 
great deal of time 
bout the financing of 

time. 



Letters 



Group wants Sliger, university to support Iranians 



Editor: 

This tetter is addressed to FSU President 
Bernard Sliger. 

In the wake of the flagrantly illegal and 
unjustified arrests of nine student 
demonstrators in the Union courtyard Sk 
Nov. 15, an organization has been formed to 
address some crucial issues at the bate of 
that oonfirontation. As a group, we are 
committed both to defending justice and 
democracy at borne as wdl as to aoppoftiag 



the courageous aad difficult straggle ma^y 
thousands miles away for denoctacj in 
ban. We are ashamed that it is American 
weapons that are kiOiag and sup pte ssin g 
the Iraaiaa people as they damor to oust the 
vicious and terrible shah. We are ou t rag e d 
^^^^^^ ^ft^j^jtt^iK* fewBw^^y^||P''*^fc^KBM^^&^GhBMB^Hl^ iKtftiii^ JBflwii^ 
struck at FSU. 

We i^ppfoach you. Dr. Sfigo', as die 
fiesldeiit of FSU. We are coaft isc d by yoor 
total sikiKe aboirt the liot on our campus. 



Shah of Iran as media star 



EdMsrt 

Up from amidst the sundry and 
contradictory pretexts for allowing the 
shah to continue in his non-elected position 
there has recently arisen, Phoenix-like, the 
argument that he is a sort of * 'liberal** 
under siege from reactionaries and 
religious fanatics whose principle aspiration 
in life is to cover women's faces with veils. 
Before taking that line too seriously, it 
might be wise to listen to what the shah has 
had to say about his alleged liberalism. 

In a recent interview with Barbara 
Walters, Baba Wawa eele meme, the shah 
stated point-blank to the intematimial 
viewing audience that women were 
ii^rior to aon. That interview became a 
tragicomic spectacle, a r^al psychodrama, 
as ^ shah's wife, inappropriately seated 
at hb «de Hkea, shed a tear upon 
perceivittg the cafious and impohte 
remarks of her self-prodaimed better half. 

fai an earlier teterview conducted by 
Mike WaUace, the shah, aftor a few 
nrombles to the effect that illiteracy was 
not a serious problem in Iran, came to the 
point: God (prcmunable the one called 
AUah, not to be confused with the CIA) had 



chosen him to rule over Iran. Wallace, his 
objectivity afire, reiterated the question: 
"Did God pick you?" "Yes." said the 
shah, "not only is God on my side but 1 am 
also his representative in Iran.'* 

These statements of his Highness, which 
are faithfully recreated in spirits if not 
precisely in letter (no instant replays 
available), lead us to conclude that A) the 
shah believes women are inferior and B) he 
believes in the Divine Rights of Kings. 
Putting A and B together, without 
even delving into other incriminating 
evidence, we must furthermore conclude 
that the shah is reactionary. Since his 
opponents, including both the religiously 
and politically inspired (i.e., that 
seven-eighths of the population not 
affiliated with Savak), called for elections 
after his dofuurture, then they must 
necessarily be classified as more 
democratic and progressive than the shah. 
Divinely inspired rulm do not run as 
caiMiidates. 

Who, then, is moie reactionary than the 
shah? Very few peof^, be they from Iran 
or elsewhere. Even Nixon ittdn't claim to 
be appointed by God. 



No way Iran will be a Vietnam 



The notion of Iran becoming * 'another 
Vietnam** for the U.S. is absurd. United 

Slates executive foreign policy is no longer 
steeped in the belief that it is the moral 

imperative of this country to piovide 
military aid to any nation's incumbent 
regime that is both anti-communist and 
experiencing internal or external dispute. 
Both the State Department and the 
Pentagon realize that U.S. involvement in 
Vietnam was a serious mistake — that the 
Vietnam conflict was primarily a biruggle 
for national unity by Vietnamese 
naiionalisis who happened to be 
communists. As a result of Vietnam, it is 
no longer within the power of our president 
to deploy U.S. military troops to another 
nation without Congressional approval. 
Hence, warmongers in the Pentagon would 
fmd it useless to persuade Jimmy Carter lo 
undertake military intervention in Iran. 

Though many State Department officials 
would re^t ihe deposition of the Shah of 



Iran, the U.S. is not about to implement 
wBH^Mty assi^ance to prevent sudi an 
event, if the shah is overthrown, the State 
Department does not fear that the USSR 
has any chance of gaining a foothold in 
ban, for the Soviets me fKtng an intense 
cfiii^iKty crisis among Arab natloss. The 
Arabs (except Libya) bitterly resent Soviet 
intrusion in their geographical sphele of 
influence. 

The goals of the Iranian Students 
Association amy indeed be laudable, but 
recent editorials by members of this group 
indicate that tiie ISA is using the treat of 
Iran becoming a Vietnam for the U.S. as a 
scare tactic to induce domestic support for 
theur cause, i.e., thehr efforts to oust the 
U.S. from Iran. In short, the ISA b feeding 
upon residual paranma rampant among 
**arm-€hair*' intellectuals who are certain 
that the U.S. will miUtarily intervene to 
prevent the shah's deposistion. As for such 
a fearful befief, nothing could be further 
from the truth. 

> • ^ . Thomas M. Katheder 



Do yon oondooe the eioesahre use of polioe 
power to subvert the c ontlltnt ioiia l right to 
demonstrate peacefuByt Are we coneet In 
i ate r ptetia gyomrlackof t u apo a ie aaatacit 
approval of geslapo tactks hi the ttmfeat 
ttfdon? 

We appeal to you to use your in^ortnt 
aad tofloeatial position on behalf of tiie 
dem ocratic principles that we vatae so 
H^^ily. As a group ccmaiitiag ptodoml- 
mmt^ of Ammrlcaa FSU sHidei^ aad 
fKuhy, we of C.I.D.I. eifect yoa to plaoe 
pmmmat^Yahiie on die saactky .of tids 
testltutloa as an eaviiomnent invioiable by 
cfaib-wiehling riot poUce aad plain-dothed 
pvedators of coa st lt u t h mri freedom. 

The Coalitioa for Iranian Democracy aad 
Independeaoe welco m e s the support of afl 
hMlividaals aad groups who agree witir the 
foyowlag demands: - 

We deaiaad that the charges against the 
nine arrested students be dropped 
inmiediately. 

We demand that the university intercede 



aad work ffgoimid^ to 
WedeawBdaamidtote 

iiaidan Stadnat Aaaodalioa hf 
gatheriag piMitogfapbers, 



agencms at ovofy teval« . 

We deamad tiMrt CIA aad al 
operatives he baaa 

We deamad aa 
idmiaiHi atWe chaia of 



only 



city 
hock' 



ity poHoe 
by afl agendas 



laiiaato a of 
to lim 



"juris^cthwtf aallto t lty '* to attack oar 



We anxiously await your response. Dr. 
Sliger, to this crises ia yoor community. 

James Lohnum 
CoaHttnn iwr Inmhm Democracy 




TONIGHT! 

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6 / Wedncidty, December 6, 1078 FLORiDA FLAMBEAU 



Local Co jple shares more than ministry 



by wtlyii toefc 

JadL mud Andrea Alders fofget 
tiiat they're differeot from tooBt 
married couples. 

They are unkiye not ooly because 
they are both mtnisters, but because 
they share their common vocation 
by sharing a single full-time job. Yet 
they have to be reminded they are 
unusual. 

Jack and Andrea serve as 
co-directors of the United Ministries 
Center, an organization sponsored 
by four denominations to serve the 
campuses in the Tallahassee area. 
They receive a single salary. 

"Andrea had just graduated from 
the seminary in the spring of 1975, 
and we were torn with the idea of 
doing something together," said 
Jack, who began his own ministerial 
work several years ago in Germany. 

"The Center was looking for a 
director. We inquired, and they were 
tnteresled. Doing it as a eoui^ lent a 
unique twist." 

Both agree that the Center gets 
Biofe wutk out of two peo^ ^aa 
(me. 

*'It's a danger to us," Andrea 
said. ''There's always the tempta-', 
^om to overw(»k." 

Theur two children, aged eight and 
ten, are ih^ major reasons for the 
Ahlers' unique situation. They 
believe that parenting is an 
important job, aiid that it should be 
shared equally by both spouses. 

**I have a dream for different kinds 
o[ work options that allow men and 
women to be with their kids more,'* 
Andrea said. "It takes time to be 
parents." 

They feel that their co-ministry is a 
real plus in their marriage. 

"If a husband and wife don't share 
anything in common, it could lead to 
repression," Jack said. "Sharing our 
interests is mutually rev^arding.'* 

Andrea finds that she is more 
aware of what good friends she and 
Jack are compared to many of their 
married friends. 

But they emphasize that their 




Revs. Andrea and Jack Ahlers 



photo by saliy sandusky 



identity is not as co-ministers. 

"This job is a challenge," Jack 
said. **We enjoy sharing the work, 
and it fits our lives right now, but it 
is not all we will ever do. We each 
have different talents." 

The main disadvantage of their 
co-ministry is that they do a great 
deal of volunteer work, and thus tend 
lo spread themselves too Utr. 

* 'There's not enough tim^ to 
celebrate each other," Jade said. 
**We try to set- aside one night a 
week to spend time together." 

Though they work together, 
Andrea insists that the hours on the 
job are different from the time spent 
at home. 

"It's assumed that we spend all 
day together as husband and wife," 
she said. "But that's professionally. 
Working together doesn't necessari- 
ly benefit our marriage. We must do 
that in other ways." 

Sharing a job has other drawbacks 
as well. By spending so much time 
together, they find that they are very 
sensitive to one another's moods. 

"We do need to get away from 
each other to work on ourselves as 
individuals," Andrea said. 

Their many commitments require 



that they schedule time carefully, 
trying to make sure that one of them 
is at home with the boys. But they 
sti-ess that neither of their jobs is 
considered more valuable than the 
other's. 

"In many families," Andrea said, 
"the woman's time is considered 
less important than her husband's. 
But my time is every bit as valuable 
as Jack's." 

Jack agrees: **I find many men 
who don't appreciate what their 
wives do. My own consciousness has 
really been raised. I've mellowed in 
my understanding of people." 

As in their work. Jack and Andrea 
equally divide the tasks at home, 
sharing the cooking and the 
housework. 

The Ahlers' children are very 
conscious of the equality of their 
parents' marriage. 

Jack finds that as most children 
accept their parents' views about 
many things, so their own sons have 
become critical of sex role 
stereotyping in society. 

"They can see the giving and 
taking in our marriage," Jack said. 



Nuclear waste stored in local forest 



by mike f roadman 



Low-levtH^iiOdear waste firora FSU 
b being stored in the Apalachicola 
National Forest, aocordin]; to Dr. 
John Winchester, a member of the 
FSU radiation protectioa Gommittee. 

Winchester spoke with three 
others on the future of nudear 



energy, as i^out 50 people listened. 
The forum was sponsored Monday 
by scientific lumorary organization 
Sigma Xi. 

High-level waste is very radioac- 
tive and is the main problem ma 
while low-level waste is much less 
dangerous, Wmchester said. 

Winchester, who served as an 



adviscMT to the Swedish govern- 
ment on the subject cyf nuclear waste, 
discussed the problems of slorhig 
the dangerous material. 

'*We have no national waste 
disposal plan,** he said. "Commer- 

tm to NUCLEAR, page 7 




InBrie 



''WOMEN AS PROFESSORS and 

Students in Political Science" is the 
title of a talk Dr. Marjorie Mowlam 
of the FSU government department 
will give today at 1:15 p.m. in Roooi 

240 Union. A discussion will follow 
this event, sponsored by the 



♦ * « « ^ 



DR. JOHN CAREY of the FSU 
religion department will speak today 
at 3:30 p.m. in the United Ministries 
Center on seminars and graduate 
programs in religion. 

WITNESSES OR PERSONS with 
information about the Nov. 15 
Iranian demonstration are asked by 
the pubic defender's office to talk to 
its representatives today from 10 




Skies should continue generally 
through tomorrow, but growing 
colder tonight. Today and tomorrow 
will be mild, with highs in the 70s, 
but the low tonight will be in the 
lower 50s to upper 40s. Winds will be 
fiDDm tfM south at IO,to»iS m-pJi.. » 



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Egg Plant Pamnegian 3.50 

Lasagna 3.50 

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Chicken Cacdatore 8- Salad (indudes 

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Life 



Nuclear 



cial plants are storing high-level nuclear waste alongside the 
reactor cores, and some of the reactors are beginiiing to fill 
up." added Winchester. 

Winchester added that 90 percent of all commercim], 
low-lcvel. nuclear waste is being stored at Barnwell, S.C. 
while high-level military waste is stored at the Savannah 
River Laboratory near Barnwell as well as in Anford, Wash, 
and in Idaho. 

He also noted some nuclear waste products have a 
half-life of up to 1 7 million years — which means by then the 
waste would be only half as radioactive. 

Winchester said Sweden is the only country to develop a 
specific plan for the storage of high-level nuclear waste. The 
Swedish plan calls for putting the waste in cannisters 
surrounded by heavy metal shieldiDg, thra bwfyiag it Sd(^ 
meters deep in solid granite mines. 

"Many details of the design showed isolatkm of the waste 



could fall for many dtffereat leaaoos," Winchester said ol 

the plan. 

Other possibilities f(n- the storage of nuclear waste cited 
bv Winchester included putting the waste into deep holes in 
the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, ejecting the waste laio 
oater space or burying it inside molten rock. 

**However, we have not deaonslnited any of thes^ 
methods can work/* Winchester coBtkmed. '*We shoeld be 
prepaved for nuKostty aew yeas ott how we malice waste 
d^posal.'* 

FSU physics profeasor Dr. Bobert Dairis s^oke in fopor af 

nuclear power. 

"The fissian reactor wQtl». It piodaces miefgy and if used 
carefoOy k is dean.** 

Davis also added that between 17 and 20 perccait of 
Florida's energy comes from nudear reactors, and for the 
Miami area this figure rises to 34 percent. 

"IVe been cast as the' bad guy in favor of nudear 
energy,'* Davis said. 



Reliance on oil as an energy source of the foture is not 
possible because "we would need# aanr Teiaa field every 
year or a new Alaska field eveiy liw Mntlis,"'ttid Davis. 

He said different QFpea of enafcr aonma wmrid be 
needed in the future. 

"Bv 2020 six types of energy will be supplyiag the needs 

liMUBi 25 



out It 



of the U.S., and none of them will contribute 
percent/* said Davis. 

Government graduate undent James Dean 
lakes ten to twelve jpeais to bnfld a nndeai 
only sfai to e||^ht years to bnHd a coal genenrtor. 

•Twenty percent of the cost of nndeir planto to go 
inierest paymentft*' «iii®aan. 

FSU m^eordogy prafossor Dr. IRWiam Long expresaed 
doubt in President Carter's national energly plan. 

"The primary cor n er s t o ne of the plan is coal/* said Long, 
who added that for the U.S. to switdi from rehanoe on fiqnid 
fiiels to coal would re<iuire 400 to 800 new mines, at least 
160,000 new miners, and a cost of as much as S4S biffion. 



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8 / Wednesday. December 6. 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



llili 



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Arts / F eatures 



Tom Morrill is nature's 
local shaman and protector 



Private Lives 



by bob shearer 

special to th«flambMv ^ 

Tom Morrill, environmentalist, social 
critic, and teacher of poetry, has published 
a book of his poems Entitled Exile No 
More. It is a book by a man who, for the 
greater part of his adult life, has lived in a 
society of which he disapproves. 

The feeling has not been entirely 
unreciprocal, though Tom is an outcast 
only by his own wish, through a long 
persistence he himself originally set and 
has maintained. Yet he is a card-carrying 
member of the same order he criticizes and 
dkdains, primarily far Its crass disrespect 
of nature. 

I suspect Tm Motryi was a protester 
k»g beibfe movemoii €ff the kite 
sbties ^t has since been dmlgrsled to 
"Docmesbttiy** margwafia, tiiough his 
protests lui¥e had even less impact tiian 
those of the anti-war period. Thus Tom has 
considered himself exiled by the failure of 
the world to see and change the modem 
dilemma against which he has dedicated 
himself: pollution, destruction of the 
treasures of nature, to he sure; but more 
than these problems themselves is their 
BManing — the spiritual poverty resulting 
from the covering up of nature as the 
ground of our existence, its conversion into 
a wasteland where economics is not 
consonant with ecology. 

Tom's growth into his home 
is in part the culmination 
of his icoruxlasm^ his 
struggle a^inst the powers 
that be . . . 

to be burdened by and to struggle with 
an iniquity of this magnitude is, as 
everyone at least secretly suspects, a 
losing proposition. Tom Morrill knows it 
too. But he is a man capable of enduring 
(tefeat, of internalizing it and' transforming 
it by making something of it. This making, 
for Tom, is poetry, as he points out in the 
preface to Exile No More. 

Subtitled "A Life in Poems," Tom would 
have us read each poem as a small stage in 
the cumulative process of his expressive 
life. This book is the chronicle of his 
maturation as a man and a poet. How has 
this maturation taken place? He tells us in 
the preface that he has "passionately loved 
and been matured by the trees, wild rivers 
and animals of my home of nearly a quarter 
of a century"; but there is more: Tom's 
growth into his home is in part the 
culmination of his iconoclasm, his struggle 
against the powers that be — those powers 
known for their claim to ultimate authority. 

')ne of those powers is the scientistic 
world view. The son and brother of highly 
respected scientists, Tom completed all of 
his coursework for the Ph.D. in biology — 
then dropped out: it is not the grand reli- 
gion of scientism that holds the ultimate 



view; r«rther. there is a more -llrililb^dial 




Tom Morrill 

. . . took muftNbilionaire Ed BaM to 
court over the twice across the 
Walkulla River 

ground upon which the Western scientific 
tradition rests, and i^at ground is natune. 

Thus when this nature that nurtures and 
matures was explicitly threatened, as Tom 
felt it was in the case of the closing of the 
head waters of the Wakulla Rwer by Ed 
Ball, Tom todk the multi-billionaire duPont 
relative to court. The issue was simple: it's 
illegal for a private individual to own a 
navigable river, even if ostensibly for the 
sake of maintaining a wildlife preserve 
(Ball had wanted Wakulla Springs to rival 
Silver Springs, according to the story). 
Tom fought it just as simply. Legend has it 
that he might have won on a legal 
technicality, but Tom would have nothing 
less than justice according to the issue. Of 
course he lost. 

But this loss, and as well the refusal of 
society at large to appreciate the vision of 
people like Tom Morrill, constitute defeat 
only from the objective point of view of that 
society. Tom, for himself, will not be 
defeated. In subjectivity he can win for 
losing, and it is in subjectivity that the 



Tom, for himself, will not be 
defeated. In subjectivity he 
can win for losing, and it is in 
subjectivity that the kernal of 
poetry germinates and grows. 

Poetry is the closest thing to a private, 
subjective language. But to be poetry it 
must communicate: the internal intuitioifof 
the poet clarifies itself through the struggle 
to reach someone else, and it is this 
struggle — the creative process pat 
excellence and at its most painful — Tom 
Morrill had undergone to publish, as he ' 
' says in the preface to Exile Mo Meie. **in 
the real sense? in people's minds and 
spirits." 

(Editor's note: See tiionow*« FIni. 
beau for a review of Tom Morrtii's Exile No 



tAKER AUTO 

PARTS 
Student Discounts 

20B North Adam 

224-7161 



INCW HOURS stsrIiNt mm Vmt 



M.III. Ititurliii 



lobomlM I 

Pastime Downstairt 









Center 

program 

explores 

trans- 

vestite 

psyche 

tonight 




Dana Douglas 



Behind her long shimmering hair and ruby-red lips lies 
the heart of a man. literally. 

His name is Dana Douglas, and tonight at 6 the whats, 
wheres. and why-fors of his job as a female impersonator 
w ill be aired on public access channel 11. 

During the interview. Douglas is asked everything from 
how he selects his wardrobe to how his love affair with a 
Marine male is developing. Viewers will also be able to 
watch Douglas at work impersonating his favorite female 
personality, Marilyn Monroe. 

The program is "Just by Chance" which was created by 
program hostess Susan Vass and program cameraman 
Gary Barg to help fulfill graduation requirements in mass 
communications . 

Douglas is currently employed by the City at Night 
Cabaret , bar on S. Monroe Avenue. The bar is an 
after-hours, bring your own bottle club which just recently 
opened. 

Douglas has been perfecting his art for the last three 
years and someday hopes to work in New York or Las 
Vegas clubs. He said impersonators performing in the 
South are ^bjiect to scorn and disrespect. 



TO 



SUGGS & NICHOLS 

SATURDAY DECEMBER 9 AT 8 PM 
TKKEIS AVAHAIU NOW 

23t umoN 

FREE FSU students 1 per I.D72 
per student $3.00 MR-stMeRls 



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''''''0'''''''VH1IHIHBI '^^MHHHHHHBIHHBMiHHilHHHHBBBHliBHIHBi^^ 

Russian ballet stars perform tonight 



Cheap Thrills 



Members of the Bobhdi and Stamslavski ballets, two 
of the most highly praised dance compiaies la the worid. 
wiU perform tonight in Ruby Diamond Auditorium at 8: 15 
p.m. In a program entitled **The Stars of the Russian 
Ballet.'* 

The Russian dancers will alio hold a dance workshop 

today 4^ 2 p.m. In Montgomery gym. 

The program is sponsored by Student Government. 

LPO. and the School of Dance. 

• • • 



CPE and Co-op Books arc sponsoring a free movie. 
**Ust Grave At Dlaibaza** tonight at 700 te Room 120 
Carraway. ♦ » ♦ 

Joel Chandler Harrb. the creator of the "Uncle 
Remus'* stones, is currently featured m an eiWbil fron 
the Shaw Collection of the FSU Libra tn 

The exhibit includes first editions of Harris* works and 

numerous iUnstrated teits as weR as a photograph of 

Harris recently ouide from a negative in the Library off 

Congress and two recent books on Harris by FSU Eiiglish 

p rofe s sor R. Bmce Bkkley. 

m m m 

Tonight's LPO fUm will be **The Wecklmg March.** 
directed by M arco Feneri. There wlU be a tingle allowing 

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RICHARD'S next to Publix in 
Westwood Shopping Center S76-2196 

LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN 

on drapes, rugs, curtains, coucties, 
dinettes, dressers, beds, desks, books, 
records & lots of other useful 
household items. The OM FasManed 
General Store 1763 S. AAonroe. 224-1434 
M-F. 12-5:30, Sat 11-5:30, Sun 2-5:30. 



1*/^ LOT ON POND 
in country dub section^ wooded 
$15,000 

4INscount if you intend to build aolar> 
878-4600 evenings 



YAAAAHA360MX 

cenditlofw navar 
alto 

strong 3 cycle trailer with sh'aps 
White Stag full wetsuit, atcell cond 
used less than 5 times 

Buescher Coronet excellent cond 
Negotiabia, call after 5, 57^14 



FOR SALE: REFRIGERATOR 2 CU 
FT. Warranty, prtoa wajilfaMi. «MI 

224-4407. 

DIAL IN HOLIDAY DISCOUNTS.. 
SHOP AT THE WFSU - TV AUC- 
TIOM AT 7PM CALL MU7I0 




71 TR6 GOOD CONDITION, 
ONE OWNEft, LOW MILEAGE 
871-6737 

CLA$$IC1»$0M©A 

A fina mater car - $2500 



VW bus 
rebuilt i 

224-7745 



'« 1966 model with a 



71 VW RUNS GOOD. NEEDS 
BODYWORK. BEST OFFER. 
CALL 070-7534 EVES. 



69 VW AUTOMATIC, RECENT 
TIRES AND BATTERY, AM^M 
STEREO, fTfS CALL 222-6949 



1972 PINTO RUNABOUT 
Will carry you anywt>ere 
Good cond., AC, luggage rack 
tiiS. l-fiy^m, altar Sqgro46-S74l 

LOOKING FOR A USED CART 

See the folks at 
USED CAR SUPERMARKET 
2525 w. Tennessee 




HONDA 500F 1972 Yoshmgra cam, 
Kerfcar h aaders^ '^^ft * Ladahart Oil 
Coater Ob Tliormoatet* Laalar Mags, 

Continental tires, to g ga g a rack. 

Better than new. 575-3901 

HON DA CL 125 STREET BIKE VERY 
CLEAN NEEDS MINOR VM1RK $150 
CALL 224-0063 




1 bdrm furnished apt. walk to FSU 
Quiet and private-$17S includes all 

utilities. 224-0904 

Sublet 2 br. apt. starting Jan. 1 - June. 
fl5 - month. Includes water, sewer & 

cable. Fully carpeted, central heat & 
air. dishwasher, disposal, pool. Low 
utilities. Call 575-660». Susa n or Elian. 

HELP! Sublet my gigantic 1 br. apt. 
Take over lease now until Juna. Gold 
carpet, dishwasher, diuosal, cenhrai 
air4«iBt. Pool, sauna 8i laundry room. 
Walking distance to FSU. Utils. 
average $20. Unfurnished Call 
576-7i»or66»4li7SGragg 

TWO bdr house near FSU, unfurnished 
kitchen equipped air, fenced yard pets 
ok. $225. mo. 1-997-2965. AAonticellO- 



Sublet Ig 1 bdrm apt $160 mo. Start 
mid-Dec. Keep my $100 deposit. Pool 
8. laundry. 1 block fr FSU. 224-4327 

looking to upgrade your living condT 
tlons? Here's your chance. Quaint 1 
bedroom apt on College Ave. $125- 
month Call Gordon-222-9787 after 6 

Country Living: Furn 2 BR house on 
farm. Lg rooms Garden planted quiet 
people only. Avail Jan — Juna 79. 
$180 mo. Call 878-2994 Soon! 

Sublet 1 Bdrm Furn apt. Cable, pool, 
laundry. Across from law school $175 
mo. Dec. 15 or Jan. 1st Call 222-9344 

SUBLET FOR JAN 2 BR NEW FRN 
UPSTAIRS, POOL. LAUNDRY. 
WALK TO FSU CALL 222-8409. 

- 

Osceola Hall will have a limited 
number of spaces available winter 
quarter. For into call 222-5010 or coma 
by 500 Chapal Dr. "Tha Placa ^ You 
at FSU" 

ROOAAS FOR RENT ALPHA XI 
DELTA SORORITY $225 PER 
QUARTER CALL DEOE 510-0770 or 



SUBLET HALE WIAMEA 2 BDRM 
IN FRONT OF POOL, CLOSE TO 
PUBLIX CALL 576-1700 

COLONY CLUB APTS 
1 BRM FURNISHED $175-MO. 



SUBLET 1 BEDROOM FURN APT. 
$160 MON. FOUR SEASONS CABLE 
TV POOL SAUNA LAUNDRY ROOM 
WALK TO FSU CALL 224-5662 

FROM $00 MO. INCL. UTILITIES 
Beautiful S, charming furnished 
rooms, central heat & air. Ideal for 
students, only 1 bik. from FSU. All 
completely renovated 8i now ready for 
occupancy. Fumishad apts. inci util. 
also availabte. See at HEARTH- 
STONE 415 W. College Ave. THE OAK 
409 W. College Ave. 

SUBLET APT 1 BLK FROM FSU 
Central AfiH free cable carpet sauna 
Free 16 mo rent start Dec 15 2242938 

Large apt for rent(sublet)start w-Jan 
school term $150 includes part, 
utillftes. 57*4479-Ken Keep tryingi 



FM RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM APT 
w-3 OTHER GIRLS $61-(-Vfc UTL 
NEAR FSU CALL S74J904 l»i 



Responsible female roommate 
needed to share 2br unfurnished apt 
w-same at Mission Ridge Apts. $50. 
deposit, $125. per month which 
inckJdes utilities. Come by Apt 146 or 
call 870-5006. AfK» roommate needed 
Mr 2 br trailer in quiet neighborhood 
near TalMiassee sports arena $50 
deposit $90 per month wtiidi 
utilities. Call 070-5026 



SuBtet 1 bdrm fum apt at Coteny 
Oubl Pool, hmury appliances, shag 
call 2249632 



Large 1 bdrm. fum. 3 t>lks. from FSU 
$155 incl. cable TV and garbage 
collection. Sorry no pets. Call resklent 



furn studio apt. $135. month 
includes cable and garltage collection. 
Dunwoody Apartments, 405 Dun 
woody St. Res. manager 222^4505, or 
90S4991. Sorry, no pals. 

Take over contract at Osceoto HaM aU 
maals maid service pool sauna TVfar 
mora into call Vltendy 2a4ai5 




50 CU.FT.SCUBA TWIN TANKS 
WITH BACK PACK CALL PATTY 
WK. 877-9033 HM. 222 1966 

AAOTOR DRIVE FOR CANON F-1 IN 

GOOD CONDITION PAY CASH 
CALL 2248045 OR 644-5505 ASK FOR 
JONATHAN 

F rmmt needed starting Dec. 15 Furn 
apt Sblocks from cam. $110 mo. phis V» 
util 576-5067 

AAALE RAAMT TO SHARE 
2 BDRM APT AT PLAZA CALL 

DAN 222-3541 

F RM NEEDED FOR WINT 8i SPR 
QURT'S IN 2-BEDROOM FURN APT 
WALKIN DIST TO CAMPUS CALL 
IMMEDIATELY 222-2ag3. 

ROOMMATE NEEDED • NICE LOC. 
NEAR SCHOOL MUST BE NEAT 
CALL SCOTT 575 5441, EVE. 

Wanted person interested in photogra- 
phy to help in a OM Time Photo 

business, some tr«^el necessary CaN 
Charles after 5 at 576-1726 

Non smoke f rmmt to share 2 bdrm 
apt in downtown area. Prefer serious 
student who gets crazy occasionally to 
preserve sanity. 224-0574 Susanne 

1 WOULD LIKE TO PURCHASE A 
TICKET TO THE RUSSIAN BALLET 

FSU BOX NO. U 6419 

PERSON TO SUBLET 2-BDRM 

FURN APT OVER LOOKING POOL 
AT PLAZA APTS. PLEASE CON- 
TACT Ronni or George 222 1359 



Female Roommate Wanted Start Jan 
1. 1 mite from FSU SlOO+ona-lhird 
utilities. FumiHiad $ BR Houae 

576-4803 

iMature FM needed to share bedroom 
of a 2 brm iVk bath townhouse $87 -|- 
one-third util. Call 576-9S70 

FM RAAMT 3BDRM FURNISHED 
$62. ONE-(-THIRD UTILITIES 2040 
WARWICK YARD WINTER ONLY, 
OWNRMS704I30 

Swingshift mother wants female grad 
student to rent room. Rent reduced in 
exchange for babysitting. Call 
38^43 after 6 pjm. 



Desperately need someone to take 
over contract at Cash Hall starting 
Winter quarter. $50 bonus 224-1887 

F roommate wanted own room but 
need own bed rent 80 per nrK) 1-3 util 
short drhto to FSU mnm Kaap 

trying 

AAALE RMMT Starting in Jan Two 
bedrm fum, walk to FSU. $86 + 1-3 
util Call 576-9972 



ROOAAAAATE WANTED 

$60 mo. -1- 1-3 utiUttes nonsmokar praf 
1010 Pepper 57S-20M 

WANT YOUR BOSS TO GIVE YOU A 
RAISE, SEND HIM A LOONEY 
TUNE FOR THE HOLIDAYSl 

Fm. rmt. wanted for Jan. 1 one bdr 
film $05 mon. -I- Vi ele. 575-3358 or 



ROOMMATE WANTED SHARE 
NICE HOUSE $80+1/1 uTIL NO 
TOBACCO MARGOT 224-9609 

Housemate M or F to share 3 br house 
by Stadium Private bedroom SIOOhvio. 
Si 1-3 util. Call Ron at 5757405 



I NEED 2 or 4 TICKETS TO THE 
BALLET - TONIGHT, TO SEE THE 
RUSSIANS. IF YOU CAN'T GO OR 
HAVE EXTRAS CALL MIKE 575-9043 

Fmrmmttosttare2brm apt, my fum 
It^ nice. Near FSU. nonsmoker $62 
wa Mufti Kristin S74.1 



Fematermt 85 a mo % ult. apt 



Lit)eral Fem Rmmt to share 3 bdrm 
tae near FSU $75 mai I a n a th l fi d uM 
nice yard 576-5039 

HOUSEAAATE WANTED, BEAUTI- 
FUL HOUSE 1 MILE SE OF 
CAMPUS. LARGE YARDS, TREES, 
WINDOWS. 100 MONTH. 576-4790 
EVENING 



HELP! NEED TWO TICKETS TO 
BOLSHEVIC BALLET CALL 599-9030 
ASK FOR CHARLIE 

Female roomate to share nica 2 
bedroom house. Washer dryer. Etc. 

Calt Debby 077-2534 

I • I 1 1 1 ^ I I III I 

Rm mate needed Jan 1st with 2 brad 
Students 3bdrm 2bath 75.00 mo. -i-1-3 
utilities. 05.00 deposit CaH Malt 

386 7M9anytime Hartsfiekt Rd. 

FM RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM APT 
W-3 OTHER GIRLS $61+<A ULT 
NEAR FSU CALL S70.$I04 

FEM RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM 
APT. '/^RT & UTIL REGENCY PIC 
APTS AVAIL. DEC15 224-9113 

TALENT NIGHT AT J J ZACKARY'S 

$S0-$20-$10 PRIZES 
Anyone interested must audition WM. 

2-6pm W. Tenn. St. 

Responsible, clean, non smoking 
male to share 1-bdr. apt at PLAZA 
Apts If interested catt 222*9905^ 
AFTER 6 p.m. 

Femate to share 2brm apt IMi mUes 

from campus. Non-smkr 
222 4517 90 per mo -I- eiechric. 



Christian Roommate wanted 
smoke 100 yds FSU. Split rent 160 nrto. 
Vautil. Laundry, pool AC. MIKE 

644-4562 

F. Rmt needed to sttare ibr Furn apt 
ctose to FSu $84 -I- utilities per 

month Call 222 6697 

Fm rmmt needed immediately for Ibr 
apt close to FSU. $85-(-Wutil. 
Nonsmokers only I Call 222-6762 after 9 

Need 1 roomate (Pref. female) neat 
and dependable. 4 bedrooms washer- 
dryer — call 576-0019 John or Chad 



Roonnate wanted large S bedroom apt. 
Will have own bedroom. CiNI bilwwoil 
10 $1 11 p.m. 222-7074 

Fm rmmt wanted. Start Dec or Jan in 
1 bdrm Reg. Pk. Apt. $95 a mo, Va util 
8. no deposit. Call Cattty 224-3650 

Rmt needed for Ig. cooperative house 
near FSU. Share responsibilitiain 

food, expenses. Call 224-8094 




B kitdwn help 
Apply in person tms Sun. bat. 12 and 2 

at 210 S. Adams 

Ctydes and Costello's 

Need xmas money? DeiKrer nwspa- 

pers 6 dys Dec 24 - 29 -4hrs-day very 
good pay. Also Sndys.386-2341 aftr 6 

OVLRSEAS JOBS — Summer-full 
time. Europe, S. America, Australia* 
Asia, etc. Ail fields, $500-1200 
monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. 
Free into — Write: International Job 
CeiTler, Bok 44lg.FB BsHtalay, CA 



$50 per 100 envelopes stuffed and 
addressed at home, write Banco 
Enterprises Box 5237 Austin Tx 70763. 

PART TIME EVENINGS. 6-9p.m. 

3 nights. Car necessary. GaN 214-2510. . 

2-4p.m. AAon-Fri. 

Summer Job — Swim coach wanted 
for Panama City Swim Club swim 
team, good pay, excellent location. 
For more information send brief 
resume before December 23 to. 
Panama City Swim Team, 306 
Virginia Avenue, Lynn Haven, 
Ftorida 32444. 

TUTORS HELP CHILDREN READI 
PART-TIME TUTORS AND AIDS 
CREATIVE DEDICATED PATIENT 
576-7522 DAYS 070-1106 EVE. 

Experienced waitresses needed to 
work lunch shift at exclusive new 
rwtaurant. 38^4541 or 305-3401. 

Leen Coenty Food Co-ep is accepting 
rnumes for the positton of coordina- 
tor. Applications accepted Nov. 28 to 
Dec. 12. Those with the five highest 
ratings will be contacted for an 
interview to take place on Dec. 17. A 
^Ktoton will be reached by Iha lONi. 
^ posittan based en 30 haurs 
k; health insurance, and 2 
paid vacatian. Atfdittanal into 
may ba oMainad at LCFC storaflnanf. 




STUDENTS! LET'S TALK BOOKS 
IMPROVE READING SKILLS! 
TUTORING PROGRAMS 

ELEMENTARY JUNIOR SENIOR 
BEGINNING JANUARY 15, 1979 
CALL 576-7522 or 878 1606 

Typing -quick, duality, 70c dbl-spc pg 
Edit Si rewrite at negotiaWa rMS 

Kym Gross 224 6375 davs 

I STRING TENNIS RACQUETS 
Ona day sarvica. Laiaast pricai in 
town. CaH BMI atSTMaoo 

Typing — all sorts — reasonable — 
correcting typewriter — franscripts 
of tapes. Reliable. Call 576-5915 9 to 5 

Typing: experienced professional 
secretary with IBM self correcting 
typewriter 75c to 1.00 per page Call 
893-4524. Spvcial rates availabte. 



Term papers typed. Experienced. 
Can pick up 8i deliver. Call Evelyn 
576-1755 9mjn. to «pjn. 



Be good to your hair so it will be good 
to you. Lanham Products now at 
Headquarters Halrcutting. 2017 W. 
Pensacola St. 576-1511. 



HOUSE PAINTIN6 
WALLCOVERINO 
PRESSURE WASHING 
experienced & reasonabte 
Call Jeff 224-7745 for asflmato 



Fast accurate typist-IBM correcting 

selec. papers, dissart.« 

Durbin 576-1900 



SUNNY DAY NURSERY SCHOOL 

Near FSU. Certified Teachers. 
Hours 7:30^:30. Call 077-0334 



BASS LESSONS 

Jazz and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 



Keep in tune 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNING 
RESTORATION, MOVINGS, 
ESTIMATES 
222-i 



Typing for students 8i 
term papers 8i diss. 10 yrs. exporianca 
phone 077-5259 after 6 p.m. 

Professtonal secretary-typist. Term 
papers, theses, dissertatians, 
resumes, etc. RHa S^THI 

TYPING 

TERM PAPERS, AAANUSCRIPTS, 
DISSERTATIONS PH. 575.1415 

New York tour 78 spend wk. in NYC 
Lvs. Tall. Dec 15 rtns. 22. includes 
trans and hotel price $143. For dtls. 
FAB or 2221771 or 8783455. NOW 

XMAS SHOPPING GOT YOU DOWN 
LET LOONEY TUNES ERASE 

YOUR FROWN! 




Pw-miienhJ^b^^ «Ea«ovi* 
cieanino feiia/ ^w^'^^^i 
Arxer, elech-o4og,s' By 4oooH«2? 
222 3170. 747 E Tenn«(Jf*JJjJ 



TAPPS Otftn^^^nVAM ^ 
problem pregnanc.es 222-^7^Z: 
9:30-11:30AM. TTHM^ 

FREE MiCHELOb DRAFT 
..FORL^OIBS 

3 - 4 PM 

8-9 PM 

POOR PAUL'S POURMOUIK 

BIG PLATTER OF SPAGHEHi 
$1.50 AT THE PUB 1312W Tiis 
llam-apm wed.'s * 



REG. GRINDER anc 
DRAFT OF SODA SI 25 AT 
THE PUB 1312 W TENH 
ST. 11 a.ro. — 4 p.m. T UEl 

GAY PEER COUNSELING 
Individual & confidential coons*(« 
offered through Univ. Mantel HaM 
canter Contact Lucy Kizirfwi mm 



Experienced typist requires finineid 
assistance via typing in my honw m 
types of typing, including thcsti m 

> anytime, 3851392 days 



I DO CHAtR WEAVING AND 
CANING. Good references, reason- 
able rates. Call Rhonda around « 
evenings. 224-0312. 

APPLIANCE REPAIR 

Service on all major appliances, air 
conditioning and heating. Sales- 
reconditioned units with 90 day 
warranty. Call Marshall, days 
599-7879 (pocket beeper) 
Evening 878-5024. LICENSED 

WE TAKE THE TIME TO DO IT 

W*®NT. Headquarters has henna, 
perms and great tiaircuts. Headquar 
ters 2017 W. Pensacola St. 576-1511. 



WED. NIGHT MICHELOB SPECiAi 
25c ON TOP OF TMl PUB ON THE 
PATI0tpjn.-2 



MICHELOB SPCOAL 

3SC AGLASS 

$1.75 A PITCHER 

NOON TO MIDNIGHT EVERY 

POOR PAUL'S POURHOUSE 



DANNI VOOT IS ASSISTANT MDM 
EOITDR AND COPPIC COORONM. 
TON. (AMOIf OTNKR TMItMtf.) 

amNI VQgT ALSO LIKIS WOOPi 

MNel is sponsoring Friday nigM 
SHABBAT SERVICES at 6 30 
dinner immediately following. Rescr 
vatkms $2.75. For info and rewra- 
tkms call Hillel 222-5454 

Come boogie with the new band ii 
town ROUGH N READY, Sat. Ridit 
Osc.f f:3B at The Shady Rert 

THe Cork 'n Ctesver is falsi ti m 
dsfs...te their aid, that is! 

To tienefit Leon Co. Humane Socifty, 
the "Cork" is sponsoring a cockfa 
party on Thurs. Dec. 14 4 7pm $i 06 
will buy a ticket which will b« good for 
ANY drink (res. $1.5^2.25) TidMts 
available at the "Cork" now. can al» 
be purchased during cocktail party 
For our canine & feline freinds, cam 
tathaCsrlt'nCfsaveronDec. R. 

2575 N. Monroe St. 3M.51t2 



SAVE TIME AND MONEY! NO 
GROCERIES, PANS, DISH SOAP TO 
BUY...SIGN UP WITH OUR ME^ 
PLAN AND CHOOSE 8, 12. « H 
MEALS A WEEK. SAGA 

COUPLE WOULD LIKE TO MEET 
81 FEAAALE. ALL REPLIES WII.L 
BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL. PA 
BOX 12702 TALLY 32308 

Greeks, dorms, GDI's, dubs -custoin 
Jerseys, $4,95 Printed! up the h»ll 8 
save money! BULLSHIRT 2?2 5309 

WANT YOUR SWEETHEART TO 
SIGH AND SWOON, SEND HER A 
ROAAANTIC LOONEY TUNE 

YOU'RE ALMOST OVER THE 
HUAAP 

We love Rick Johnson beceuatwj 
hear he can lick his eyebrows. 
Rick? Elmodine & Ama nda 

ALICIA DOESN'T LOVE HIM FOR 
HIS TONGUE. 

SUE . 
Thanks you are the greatest f nana " 
the worMI I love ya, PHERG . 

TONIGHT at the TRADING POSTj 
hot ham and cheese and hot 

the day for $1 97. Let dinne-" beonw 
tonight; from 5:00-10:30P 

Female companien wanted for fiy'"* 
h-ip to Eluthera. mm be matvfe 
intelligent & down to earth ryp^ 
Preferably over 21 If interasNd w<riw 
me for nr>ore info R./" 
Circle South 323BI 




Wed. is "Over Ihe Hump Nile" 
Heineken Draft S3.00 pitcftor SJB 
glass 7-i2pm at Brew and Ova 422 N. 

D uval St. 

JO'S FOR HAIR 

the difficult we do Iminediatly, the 
impossible takes a little longer. We're 
tlia ones to see if yauNiie 901 problem 
hair. Can as today. 22S-111t 

— N. 



BLUE EYES nf 
I'AA STILL WAITING FOR $p«JE OF 
THAT GOOD THING. i^S YOUR 
AAOVE. WHEN? 

A LADY PRIEWP ^ 

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 

SAGA IS NOW SELLING MEAL 
PLAN TICKETS '^OR WINTER 
QUARTER COAAE THE FOOD 
SERVICE OFFICE IN THE UNIO« 

8am -4pm DAILY _ 

RECYCLED JEANS-bOUght A SJ^ 
Especially need 32 3* ^'a'*^ 
Great selection of ^SS^^ln^ 
SM7. BULLSMIIIT SHOP W »• 




Sports 



[leaning facial ffe^^t?*^^ 

172 3170 747 E TanSg^Sf^"*"^* 

|harge Acceptad . *^t«r 

L^^^^ oHars fraa ^m7^-^ . 

hob'em pregnanciarMj^T^^'P 

FREE MICHELM OftAPT 
FOR LADIES ■^•^ 

4 PM 
- 9 PM 

POURMQUCK 

JIG PLATTER OF SPAGHETTI 
; 1.50 AT THi PM* uiS y? tHI . 

''EG. GRINDER and — 
DRAFT OF SODA $1 25 AT 
THE PUB 1312 W tInn 
ST. n a.m. — All.nn Tli cc 

. GAY. PEER COUNSELING 

'^♦al Health 
^itr contKt Lucy KinriM mm 

• In my home All 

fes of typing, including thes« 

flnywna, WlJfi days 

Ied night michelob special 

^r'iS i?^ °/ ™» HI* ON THE 



llCHELOB SPBCtAL 
1c A GLASS 
^75 A PITCHER 
'M TO MIDNIGHT EVERY WED 
^ PAULAS POURHOUSB 

^NNI VOOT IS ASSISTANT NEWS 
>ITOR AND COFFEE COORDINA- 
>R . (AMONQ OTHER TMhSS 

iHHi voar Auo likes wo ofs. 

Ilei is sponsoring Friday night 
lABBAT SERVICES at 6:30 with 
>ner immadiataly fMlowing. Reser- 
bont $2 7S. For into and mmnm- 
n% call Hillel 2 M-S454 

Ime boogie with the new band in 
ROUGH 'N READY, Sat. nigM 
- 9 9:30 at THa Shady Nail 



Cork 'n Cleaver Is ^ 
js...to their aid, ttiat isl 
benefit Leon Co. Humana Society, 

I "Cork" is sponsoring a cocktail 
J-ty on Ttnirs. Dac. 14 4-7pm. $1.00 

II buy a ticket which will be good for 
YY drink (reg. $1,50 2.25) Tickets 
hilable at the "Cork" now, can also 
[purchased during cocktail party. 
t our canine & fatHit ffoinds* 00 
f he Cork 'n Claa v ir on Dac. 14.. 



|6 N. 



'E TIME AND MONEY! NO 
lOCERiES, PANS, DISH SOAP TO 
IY...SIGN UP WITH QUE MEAL 
<N AND CHOOSE I, IX Or IS 
EALS A WEEK. SAGA 

lUPLE WOULD LIKE TO MEET 
IFEAAALE. ALL REPLIES WILL 
. KEPT CONFIDENTIAL. P.O. 
|X 12702 TALLY 32300 

?ks, dorms, GDI's, clubs-custom 
Isf ys, $6.95 Printed! Up the hill 4 
[e money I BULLSMIRT 222-5209 

InT YOUN SWEETHEART TO 
;h and SWOON, SEND HER A 
\ANTIC LOONEY TUNE 

lU'RE AUMOST OVER THE 

\P 

. love Rick Johnson because we 
|r he canjick his eyabr ows. Weil 
|k? Etanodina 9t AfnaNda 

I CIA DOESN'T LOVE HIM FOR 
TONGUE. 



inks you are tfw graatost friend in 
Iworldl I lava ya, PHERG 

JIGHT at the TRADING POST^ 
I ham and cheese and hot soup Of 
Iday for $1.97. Let dinner be on i» 
|ght, from 5:0O-1O;30p.m. _ 

lale companion wanted tor flylnv 
to Eluthera. Must be mature, 

lligent & down to earth type. 
Jferably over 21 If Interested write 
for mora into R. Allan SUA CMfiiw 

le Saulh 3»M 



JE EYES- 

[STILL WAITING FOR SOME OF 
^T GOOD THING. IT'S YOUR 
fE. WHEN? 

^DY FRt«IO ; 

:xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 

^A IS NOW SELLING MEAL 
»N TICKETS FOR WINTER 
>RTER COME EY THE^FOOD 
^VICE OFFICE IN THE UNION 
•am-4pm DAILY 



YCLED JEANS-bought & sold 
:ially need 32-34 wai»t sizes. 
If selection of Lavl, Lee, etc 
BULLSHIRT SHOP 123 ^ 



Volleyball team flirts with the big time 



by gerald ansley 

flambeau sports writer 

Like figurative babes in the woods, the 
FSU women's volleyball travels to 
luscaloosa (Ala.) today to breath the 
rareified air of the national championships. 

Having never participated in the national 
championships before, FSU will get a 
chance to compare itself with the giants of 
the volleyball world: UCLA, USC, San 
Diego, Pepperdine and San Jose as well as 
Hawaii, Utah State and Brigham Young. 

Of course, FSU may or may not play all 
those teams. The 24 women's volleyball 
teaaft represented are divided into four 
pools of six teams each. Each team plays 
the other five once (best two oh off three)* 
on Thursday and Friday, with the two top 
teams advancing from each pool to form the 
imd ei^t. Those eighi fli^ heal llitee of 
five single eKmination on Saturday to 
estaUish a natimiaf dmmfiioB. 

FSU begins pool (day agidnst Sov^weit 
Mlsaottri and foflows wt& games against 
ArizoDtf State, Texas A & M« Pepperdine, 
and, one of the Gofiilhs, top-seeded UCLA. 
No Soiitheaalem team has evef emerged 
from these preHadimry pools, and FSU 
hopes to diange that. 

**h woukl be foolish to say we're going 
oat there to win tius totttnameat«*' FSU 
coach Cedle Reynaud i^mltUd, **hot we 
diovM win tloee matches, and that would 
be better than any team from this region 
has ever done. I would be (tisappoiiiled if 
we were shut out." 

The opening matches for FSU will be 
rather interesting. Southwest Missouri, the 
Seminoies first opponent, is Reynaud's 
alma mater, where she. was a voOeyhi^ 
star. Though FSU played hi SWM's 



tournament in October, Reynaud has never 
actually coached against her former team. 
In addition to that emotional impetus. FSU 
will play Texas A & M that same day, a 
team they trounced in that October 
tournament in Missouri. 

"It'll be weird coaching against my old 
coach," Reynaud noted, "but you got to 
figure we*U have the me^ edge over A A 
M. 

FSU will sport much the same line-ap it 
has all year, as it fashicmed a 28-9 matdi 
record and swept 11 straight matches 
including the state championship. Margie 
Wessel, Velma Wri^t, Nancy Towasend, 
Sue Usher. Margaret Stephens, and Joy 
Blanchard will be the starters. Blanchard, a 
talented fteshmaa, wiU be startmg in place 
of jaaior Yohuido Restrpo, who has 
fractuied an arm, but may stSl see -some 
playing time, la addition to those seven, 
Barhara Barnes and Corddia Camphefl wffl 
also see plenty of action. 

'*The key to this team." said Reynaud, 
"is that they never give up. We have no 
superstars, fortunately, so we stay 
together, we play united." 

Regardless of what happens in 
Tuscaloosa, FSU*s seascm is net yet over. 
Witii Reynaud hoping to impfess the 
Califoria teams enough to win an invitation 
to some of their high-caliber tournaments, 
FSU can be proud to have t3tt$df woir iMtr 
accolade. After capturing the regjMHi 
tournament in Lakeland two weelBi igo, the 
Semmotes were mvited to be the Untted 
States Volleyball Association's (USVBA) 
female representative on a tovr of Jamaica. 
Starting Jaimary 4, akmg with a USVBA 
men's team from Miami, FSU will tour the 




Skull session 

. . . CecMe Reynaud Im wMe SMMfiar] gfvi§$ kMudkms dufkig 

island playing tournaments against the over,'' Reynaud aoted. **Thls has heea tlw 
Jamaica national team. best team, oa €»r off the omt, that I've 

**You know I'm sorry the seam's almost coached." 



JIM, I'M REALLY GOING TO MISS 
YOU NEXT QUARTER. 
LOVE, PUMPKIN 



To tiM Hartford girl from URI — 
please let me know if you need a ride 
Dave in Magnolia. 

Tuesday NItes were nia**®^,!^^ 
Michelob $1.75 P«»char - 3Scfl^ 
7.12PM at Brew & Coa 4» H. DMW 

Ride needed for 2 to Key west or 
Miami anytinoa ifter Dec 13. Will 
share $ and drivine. OMI Joyca 

E venings 575 3223 ' 

For Abortkms. prasnancy screening, 
bint« canfrol ar haami Ma. call the 
Feminist Woman's Haalth Cantar 
224-MOO 



ASTROLOGICAL CONSULTATIONS 

Self -development, compatability, per- 
sonality patterns, career aptitude, 
ctiildren. Ttiorough, professional 
counseling at reasonable ratas. 
Fred McDonald, M.S. 
P.O. Box 20374 



Alptia Lamba Delta initiation In 
Dorman Hall on Dec 7 at 7p.m. All 
members must attend! Sunday dress 
raotfirad! 



^^3|c 3|C 3|€ 5jc 3|c sjc sfc 3jc 3|C3|65§C sjc 5|C3|W§t3§C3§K8jl' 



ANYONE WISHIMG TO OBTAIN 
CIRCLE OF GOLD CALL S/S^IO 

CANOE RENTALS on WaKulla River 

& US 98. Full day A ^ ^^ ^SH 
drinks & beer available. Open 
everyday except Mon. 925 6412 

NEED INFORMATION 

fmyone witnessing or having any 

ififormation concaming the Iranian 

demostration of N*v. IS 

to room 346 of tt»a wMon wtm/^Mc. a 

between 10a.m. and Ip.m. 

ED HARVEY ^ ^ 

Office of the Public Dafandar 



APPLIANCES 
Will buy and-or haul off 
appliances. Call Marstiali 
Sf9-7t79 (pocket beapar) 
m^tMUCaNSED 



your 
days 



0111 



SIGMA PHI'S 
Y DON'T YOU CLEAN YOUR 
RT piOM THE BRIDGE? 



imaaaculate typing - I'm so 
broke I'm livin' in a tent with nottim' 
to eat; I got holas in.my ak«i 
can't afford booxe. Biit ymm % 

your sympathy, just your typmg 
business. $.75 page Contact Danni at 
tt»e Flambeau office. 

I a ■ L ■ » » ■ ■ ■ ♦ ^ * * ' " ' ' ■ - " ' - ' ■ "' ' 



To Sandl and Karen's myslarioua 

Sunday night caller: 

You hung up much too soon! We never- 

got to set upa date. Call us back we're 

in suspense. Sandi A Karen. PS sure 

tfalwpalliatlPtg m yaw —o a t clears 

mwtuni 

NEED HELP IN CRAMMING POK 
FINALS??? Let OMNI save you time. 
Free delivery of great food to your 
dorm or frat. day or night, till la.m. 
Delicious pi«a, foot long s ubs, 
burgers A hot dogs, hot coffee Si coco 
and much more. So call "Iha OMNI for 
help- 21t-MM 

TODAY'S TRADING POST TREAT; 
FREE madKim soft drink with a hot 
bam and cheese for $1.97. Try our 
fresh fruit, yogurt and natur^ nibbles 
from Leon County Food Cooff 

MICHELOB SPECIAL 
3SC A GLASS 
S1.7S a PITCHER 

NOON TO MIDNIGHT EVERY WaO. 
POOR PAUL'S POMRHOUSE 

Have an idea? A problem that Student 
Govcrnmeat could solve? Any 
day— 24 hrs — can Orag KM^gfridi 

XMAS BREAK HAIRCUT 

Come see US for that special haircut 
you need for the holidays. JO'S POtt 
HAIR 222 1112 1020 N Monroe 

ConuHete hIairstyling-Wasn, cono. 
tion. Off a Mow *y AcM 
balance perms Henna's 

neutral or cotor short hair or 

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students under supervision of quali- 
fied instructors. Tall. Coflegt of 
Barber Styling. 1221 Appalachee 
Pkwy. call m-mrn for appt. ' 



"1 ■[ ■■■ii». ii ii i! a!n 



FSU SPECTRUM IS FILLING 
SPOTS FOR WINTER QUARTER. 
ANY BAND THAT PLAYS ANY 
ORIGINAL TUNES NOW IS YOUR 
CHANCE TO GET ON TELEVISION 
FSU SPECTRUM CALL2225503 ASK 
FOR ISAAC ASST PRODUCER 

ALL GIRLS INTERESTED IN 
WINTER RUSH, SIGN UP THIS 
WEEK /MON-THURS 10-2 IN UNION 
COURTYARD OR AT 322 UNION 



EVERYBODY'S DOING IT. 

Looking good and saving money at 
JO'S FOR HAIR 222-1112 1020 N. 
A^roe 

Howard Johnson s Restaurant Rum 
Keg Louffge Budwaisar draft SBc 

5-7p.m. Mon.-Sat. 

JOGGING SUITS. S,M,L,XL 
over 100 to choose from reg. 32.50 only 
$20. POOR RICHARD'S between 
Publix A Eckird's in WashiMOd 
Stropping Center. 576-21f§ 



fxi/e No More 



"A life ia Pmms 



hf Ton MorriB 



Lost: one pair golo framed glasses. 
Tfiey were m the pocket of a yellow 
raincoat left in BCM BLOG. last Wed. 
You can keep Ria oaat. Pfaase call 

j||^^^*^3^^ 



AvaUabk at BiU's Booksforo, 

May's 

ood MfoMofl's 



*W*^I» »l» •l^ •i^ ^ ^1* ^» ^ ^ ^ ^ *^<^* 




II 



Dillard-less FSU starting 
new season, Williams says 



ft 



Losmg a i^yer of Mickey DUlttd's 
calOier could be worthy of a iimoiis 
bredcdowttiBrnost basketbtll ooadies, bvt 
Joe WiffiftM aad the "78 SeniBoies foen to 

be midiikg tlie adlostiiieiit 

"Ifs like startiiig a new aeaaon," 
WUIiafiis said, "and we are <nily one 
practice and one game into it'* 

Dillard-less against Auburn Monday 
night, the Seminoles refied on good defense 
their fast-break and Murray Brown, who 
finished with 42 points to beat the Tigers 
71-70. 

Although admitting his ball club made a 
lot of mistakes, Williams cited the key play 
by senior Tony Jackson as one of the finest 
he has ever seen, and said it may have 
turned out to be a game-saver. The 
Seminoles had fallen behind by a basket 
late in the game when Jackson took the ball 
inside on the dribble, eluded two Auburn 
defenders and dun^ped it off to Brown 

Phillies sign Rose 
for 3.2 million. . . 



ORLANDO (UPI) — Pete Rose ended his "cloak and 
dagger'* search for a new team yesterday by signing a four 
year, $3.2 million contract with the Philadelphia Phillies 
which made him the highest paid player in baseball 
history. 

The 37-year-old former Cincinnati Reds star said he was 
offered more lucrative contracts by four other teams — 
Atianta, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, and Kansas City — but 
decided on the rallies because Philadelphia was the place 
he liad '*ahirays wanted to play.** Rose's $800,000 a year 
contract pus&es him ahead Mike Schmidt, Jiis new 
teammate, who earns $560,000 annuaHy. Larry Hisle of 
MihKraokee makes $525,000 a year and Reggie Jackson of 
the New York Yankees earns over $400,000 in salary. 

it appeared for a while that the Phillies were out of the 
running for Rose. Last Thursday they announced that 
negotiations had broken off but they never removed their 
offer from the table and when they upped the ante last 
Sunday, Rose made up his mind to go widi them. Rose said 
he felt he could be the key player die Phiffies need to win 
the National League pennant. 

. . .while Carter's 
inflation fighters 
did a double take 

WASHINGTON (UK) — President Carter*s inflation 
fighters took a look at Pete Rose's $3.2 million salary 
bonanaa yesterday, did a double take and said they stiU 
expect tl^ Philadelphia Phillies to do that bit in the war 
against rising living costs. 

Admitting the basebaU superstar's windfall cau^t them 
**off balance," a ^okesperson for Carter's Ceondl on 
Wage and Price Sta^iNty first told UPI Rose is exempt 
froi# vohintary wage price stanlterds because he is a 
business unto Himself and outside the purview of a 
watchdog mechamsm geared to monitor only the biggest 
corporations. - 

Later, the spokesp^Rson called back with a revIM 
explanation that came down to this: whfle Rose personaUy 
is beyond reach of the irar agdnst InflaticMi, tfe'Pfi^es 
are not, and Carter's Ihti-inflation team expects them to 
keep their overall payroll within the voluntary 7 percent 
wage hike limit, Pete Rose or no Pete Rose. 

That seemed to imply other Phillie ball players and team 
employees might have to settle for less, if Philadelphia is 
to meet White House expectations in this matter. 



under the goal for the easy tying score. 

Williams was pleased with the victory 
and said the Seminoles would continue their 
aggressive st|de of play even without their 
quickest player. 

**BanGidly we will still try to run our ffst 
bteak and play good defense," Williams 
said. ^*We were able to do both well against 
Attbom, and if we had hit our free tiirows in 
tiie second half we woold hmre won by ten 




However, the loss of DOlard wOl focce 
Williams to put more emphasis on tempo 
contiS, a mediod Williams uses to slow 
down the pace of the game, to force tfie 
opponent to guard the Seminoles away 
the basket and to ensure that FSU takes 
only high percentage shots. 

The Seminoles take to the road again this 
week for a big game against the Florida 
Gators in the Jacksonville Coliseum 
Saturday (8 p.m.), and because of the game 
site, Williams sees fan support as an 
important factor. 



Joe Williams 



stM wants to run fast break 



roilet bowl to 
be held Thursday 



Soorts ^ 




The toilet bowl, an annual football 

game pitting the Army ROTC against the 

Air Force ROTC will be held Thursday at 

11:30 p.m. on the IM field. For more 

information call Hal Staton at 575-9779 

• • ♦ 

The FSU Curling Club will meet today 
in Room 69 Bellamy to discuss plans for 
the upcoming worldwide tour. For moit 
information call Wisk Broom at 644-5507. 





II.S.UIVEI1S 

Christmas Package Sato 

CUBA DIVE TRIP 

March 17 



Scuba ClassM 
Begin Jan. • 



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BARRTS 

North Fto.DivtCwiftr 

i3«u. a ii i t i r ina. m4im 




SEE US FOR 
THE FULL 
LINE OF 

*^HOES. 



FLORIDA 



V. 



FLORIDA STATE 
BASKETBAU 

JACKSONVIUE 




COUISEUM 



TJCKEIS AVAIUBU Af TUUY 
GYM TICKET OFFICE 

for FSU STUDENTS 

HURRY! 



Waffle Trainer 

Designed for Cross Country 
runners, the Waffle Trainer features 
a patented waffle sole for cushion 
and traction, yet minimum weight. 
Flared outer sole, t>eveled heel, 
tough blue nylon upper with bright 
yellow "swoosh" tnark. 



$29.95 




LAST GRAVE 
AT DIMBAZA 



• •* ■ 



FREE FILM SPONSORED BY CO-OP BOOKS 



This classic documentary remains the 
best investigation of the devastating 
iHimen costs of the apartheid system in 
South Africa. So powerful is its indict- 
ment of of a society where the white 
population has the highest standard of 
living in the world, while that of the 

Maclcs is among the lowest, that the 

120CARRAWAY 



South African government produced a 
film specifically to counter its effects. 

Last Qrave At Oimbaza was shot illegal- 
ly by whites in the cities and by blacks 
in the Bantustans. It was smuggled out 
of tfie country and edited In Europe by 
SqiiMi African filmmaker Nana Mahomo. 



BLDG. 7:30 TONIGNT 





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lie li 








yU':iiMs'.cs *.af, *^H' 




bi 



Bids 

work 

accomi 

Scnal 

dccisioi 
and th« 

buildiiij 

The 
said 
undt 

Scirr 

tmxp.i 

Bi; 

JACI 

busine 
T shirt 
historx 
him t(i 

But (| 
sale oi 
words 
havf rrj 

Drtt 
the trt 
sales 
Admiiil 
conct rl 

were s<| 

Inf 
is t| 

WAI 
a inaj< 
progr. 
prices 
the aj 
yester 

Pre 
panel 
energy 



TH 
special 
Per SOI 
weleoi 

INT] 
l\i)Si 

bccauj 
officej 
organ^ 



tnoi 

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will noti 

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tfimifJ 
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FLORIDA FLAMl 



tor 



r by the 

^as defdrtcd by the 
rces, ladttding Sen. 
c not yet enough 
to it in the 1979 

roa, D-Panama City 
et «he ERA teach the 
il when the legislature 
[on. He is chairperson 
"ommittee, and all bills 
committee before tiiey 

the full Senate. 




I 

m 

g 



fate 

Re Ro. or MO 

I DESIGN 



Capitol walkway 



bids taken today ^\iCNN BOCK IIV THb 

Bidswiflbet^ today on constroctioii of a Sinn nnn I .^(^^ k/j^ 



BWs wffl be t^ today on construction of a $100,000 
waiiway from tiie Capitol to the Senate office building and 
worlL was b^a on a $40,000 remodeling of two offices to 
acoommodate it. 

Senate President Phil Lewis said he's responsible for the 
decbion tobnfld the walkway to make it easier for senators 
Md the public to get from the senate chamber in the 
Capitol to offices of a few senators in the adjoiniaa 
buflding. J— — e 

The same situation exists in the House but members 
said they'll put up with the inconvience rather than 
undertaking a new project in a building that has been 

occupied for less than a year. 

Some critics already are callii^ the Senate move a 
taxpayer ripoff. 

Big bust t-shirt sells 

JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - A JacksonvUle Beach 

businessman said yesterday he is willing to halt the sale of 

T-shirts commemorating the largest drug seizure in U.S. 

history if the judge tryi^ tiie defendants in the case asks 
him to. 

But C.W. Stanford, owner of the Beach Body Shop, said 
sale of the shirts, which depict a marijuana leaf and the 
words, 'Jacksonville, Florida, Aug. 11, 1978—112 tons." 
have increased considerably since publUnty about them. 

Defense jittomeys for 23 Soolll American crewmen of 
the freighter, * 'Heidi, "raised the question of the T-shirt 
sales when Rob^ C^nley» ^e Drug Enforcement 
AdnunistratkMi's ddef local agent, was spotted at a rock 
concert over the weekend where his wife and daughter 
were selling ^ shirts. 

Inflation-energy conflict 
is tearing us apart: Kahn 

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The government must resolve 
a major conflict between President Carter's anti-inflation 
program and maintaining energy supplies through higher 
prices and possibly some rationing of unleaded gasoline, 
the administration's chief inflation fighter warned 
yesterday. 

Presidential adviser Alfred Kahn told a congressional 
panel *'the tension between inflation on one hand and the 
energy problem on the other is tearing us apart.*' 



In Brief 



THE NEW FSU YEARBOOK STAFF has called a 
qiecial meeting tonight at' 7 in Room 107 Business. 
Persons interested in woiting with the yenbook ate 
wekonie. 

INTERNATIONAL STDSeNT ASSOOAHON ELEC- 
TIONS scheduled for txmf^ have been postpmied 
because only one person has been nominated for each 
office. More details and plans will be ghren in the 
ori^urization's r^olar newsletter, say ISA officm. 

•II arlaf ptNcy: Tlw FlambMU In Brtaf actio n, tfcm n* or limited space, 

does not print notices o» regular m ee t i n o t «f in« i>mrmjp Sf OMP *- 
registration is required, nnirning events wW be anraunted the prevlMK OBy 
and af f«moon«nd evOTing events the sanr>e day as tt^ey occur . Only one notice 
will be run or Mch •¥«it md all avwil* must be 0(»n to tt>e puWic. Notices 
will not be taken over itm l e le p hon e, but mmt ba mailed to T he Flamba au at 
FSU Box U 7001 or delivered to T^Flarnt)eaoorfleaat»*II.Woaia*Bf'BA»a. 
by 1 p.m. tha day barore thay are due to run. 




Weatlier 



The current fair weather will continue through tonight, 
turning partly cloudy tomorrow. The high will be in the 
upper 70s today, dropping into the low to mid 50s tonight 
and reaching around 80 tomorrow. Winds will be from the 
southeast at 10 to 15 m.p.h. today. 



f|!!| 



i 



7 



D you're a little bored 
with every New Year s 

Eve turning out like 
every other New Year's 
Eve, we've got some 
really good news for you. 

It's called the Pobst-Marsholl T\K±er 
New Year's Eve Party. It's d real hand- 
clapping, foot-stomping rock concert 



I 



fill 



that comes to you live 
from New Orleans By 
radio lust check your 
local listing lor the tune 
and station. 
Then pick up some 
Rabst Blue Ribbon. And have 
yourself the best New Year s youye 
had in years. 



1 

4 



nffiffABSTMARSHAIXTIICKER NEW YEAirS EVE P)%BTY 



' J .nr."' . r 



4 / Thursday, December?, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



The search: Rejecting certainty, ducking despair 



by Clara raulenMNi 



The 



fat tiM 



If he wcvs 
. • • !• 
tobeMito 



MMlhfaig. IM to be Mto Mawiliiig te to be fai despair. 

- IkiM The Moviegoer by WeaayPeegr 

Tve been in <tospair lately, or what I thooght was 
despah', but wfakfa in fact may only be evidence of a 
restive spirit. I am nof alone in my restlessness, a fact 
which should comfort me but doesn't. Many of the 
people I know are restless. When they talk to me they 
seem ill at ease, uncomfortable with themselves and 
their surroundings. They shuffle from one foot to the 
other while they talk to me, like a child in need of a 
bathroom. They twist their hair and laugh nervously and 
look away from me. If only this were different, they say. 
If only I lived in another town or had a better job or could 
find someone to love, then I would feel at home. 

A few of the people I know aren't restless; they're 
smug. I've found the answer, they say; I am at home. 
They've found their salvation in politics or religion or 
individual hypersensitivity. I envy the smug ones, I really 
do. I disdain their discoveries; I mock their happiness, 
but it's only envy talking. I envy them their ability to put 
their skepticism aside and embrace something 
wholeheartedly. I envy their trust and their unabashed 
dfssire for wholeness. I have faith in their faith. 1 wish 1 
were like them sometimes, but I am not because of my 
own terrible interest in my spiritual exile; an exile I have 
felt for so long it seems an irreducible part of me. 



Free Estimates 



Admittedly, a large portion of my exile is self-imposed. 
I nurture it, fastidiously maintain tt and keep it safe from 
easy solutions. I could have chosen to live my lif^ in a 
simpler manner. I could have become a doctor or a 
physicisy or a missionary; some strenous occupation that 
would consume some of the time and energy 1 now 
devote to reading and wondering and putting words 
down on paper to try and make sense of it all. But, I 
didn't choose a simple life, and I am usually content with 
that decision. There is, in fact, a part of me that 
considers myself to be better than those people who seek 
jobs instead of faith. (Which is not to say that you can't 
seek both.) There is a part of me that believes I am more 
questioning, more complex than those people. 

Of course, this is spiritual bigotry of the worst sort, 
and it precludes the possibility that these people might 
be seeking their faith in their jobs and relationships, 
which is certainly as valid', if not more so, than looking 
for it in books. Still, it is to the people who search for 
meaning in books that I fee! closest. We exchange books, 
pass along words and ideas with all the fervor of religious 
zealots. We know what is meant by "the search." We 
know how painful our exile can be, and laugh with the 
hard won humor of attempted suicides at our crazy hist 
for the peace that passeth all understanding. 

I know 1 believe in nothings really, and I want so badly 
to believe in something. I am afraid of a life without faith. 



There are things that 1 know have value and meaning; 
things like love and family and friends. I believe in these 
things, but I find them too painful to grasp. It*s like 
touching a live wire. I love my family as much as 1 as able 
to love. They affect me more than anyone else. Yet. in 
the very act of loving, we wound each other, my family 
and I, in desperate >Vays, with intent and without. I have 
learned to always keep love an arm's length away, so thw 
learning of it is not too painful, whUe, at the same time, I 
wonder if the pain is the learning. 

I am in awe of the power of love, but I cannot rest c as\ 
with anything so powerful as that. And, it is an easv rest 
that I want right now; calm, peace, home. Of course, 
these concepts (for that is all they are — just ideas I 
have) are denied me by the nature of the search, which is 
open-ended. I do not really believe I will crack the puzzle. 
I do not really believe I will, in this life, find my way 
home. 

When I am not so weary, when I am more excited by 
**the possibility of the search," I don't mind a restive 
spirit. It is only during the times when 1 am tired and mv 
brain is addled that I begin to consider the luxcries of 
certainty. Certainty tempts me, it is seductive. Manv of 
the writers 1 admire most have converted to Catholicism, 
a conversion that used to puzzle me and is now beginning 
to make sense. I wish I knew God better. I consider the 
possibility of a religious conversion for myself, toy with 
the idea of giving myself oVer to a total belief in 
something for which there is po proof. 

Then I laugh, shake off my weariness and resume the 
search. I guess if I see a vision FU just have to deny it. 



Letters 



Palestinian Day is 
blow against Israel 

Editor: 

On Dec. 2, 1975, the United Nations established a special 
unit on the Palestinian people which would, among other 
things, encourage annual observance of an International 
Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People.** The first 
sudi observance was Nov. 29, the anniversary of the U.N. 
Partition Resolution which led to the re-birth of Israel. 

This Palestinian Committee and its day of observance was 
not created for humanitarian reasons, but rather as a new 
political offensive against the state oi Israel and as an 
attempt to disrupt a peaceful resolution of the Middle East 
conflict. The Palestinian Liberation Organization, with its 
well-documented record of violence, murder and atrocities, 
is ^e major force behind this new committee. There is 
nothing to indicate that this new special unit will reflect 
anything but the policies and goals of the PLO — 
destruction of the state of Israel and her people by terrorist 
activities. Indeed, one of the Palestinian Committee's first 
acts to prepare for the solidarity observance was to begin 
producing vehemently anti-Israel films and propaganda. 

These films and propaganda did not dwell on the trail of 
innocent blood and the wanton destruction left by PLO 
terrorists around the world. Instead they offered a carefully 
laundered version of the PLO and portray the Palestinians 
as guiltless victims of Zionism. They were efforts to distort 
the history of the Middle East. They were attempts to 
disrupt the peace process, unfortunately at a time when the 
Camp David accords have brought about a new spirit and a 
hope tor peace. It is a travesty that the U.N. should have 
sponsored such a movement. 

The United States as a member of the U.N. contributes 25 
percent of the U.N. budget. On a pro rata basis the United 
States is assessed 25 percent of the costs of this Palestinian 
Comnmiee. There is no way the U.S. c^, in good 
ei)nscience, contribute its taxpayers dollars to a committee 



whose goal is to propagate hatred against another cmintry. 
We are not speaking of hundreds of millions of dollars. In 
fact, the total amount comes to less than $200,000. But to 
withhold this money would have been a protest and a 
message that the American people will not condone 
terrorism. A message that the United States condemns the 
efforts of the PLO to obstruct the peaceful attempts and 
initiatives towards a solution of the Middle East problems. 
A message that we do not share with them their goal of the 
total destruction of Israel and her people. 

Wendy K. Brezin 



Watkins is ignorant 



Editor: 

Steve Watkins is ignorant at best. Not naive and possibly 
not stupid either. I wonder what makes reasonable 
journalism? I have serious doubts that idiosyncratic views 
can ever really replace well-researched information. Did the 
fledgling journalist bother to check out all the facts? Did he 
bother, for instance, to read the counter-petition signed by 
dozens of graduate research assistants? The same graduate 
students that were most hurt by the slothful indolence and. 
incompetencie of the **oppressed," and "agrieved" shop 
personnel?!? I submit you didn't work hard enough because 
you didn't get the facts straight. Or vice-versa. But, then 
why should 1 be surprised? The Flam.beau has always been a 
pitiful rag and that's too bad because we do need a decent 
forum for disseminating information and presenting views. 
Mr. Editor, when you choose to present views under the 
guise of "facts" you are committing journalistic sin. If there 
is justice, you will go w here all bad journalists go. Nowhere! 

Andrew J. Rozsa 

■ 

Editor's note: The petition in question w«s signed by 23 
psychology grad students, none of whom would give their 
names to the press. They requested former FSU President 
Stan Marshall to remove from their Jobs five psychology 
research shop employees involved hi m frievaace soft 
against that department because, aeeordiDg lo a 
spofcespersoD for the stniie^, ^'Tkfaiga right now Just 
arenH getting done. The employees are' speacttag a lot of 
li^f on l^hr grfevance suit and its holding up the ^radmUe 
prajects.** 



Breakfast a success 

. Editor: 

I would like to thank all the people who made the recent 
ODK Grads Made Good Breakfast a success. The breakfast 
has become an important part of FSU's Homecoming each 
year, and it is gratifying to have been a part of the event, 
where students, faculty and community members come 
together to honor three outstanding graduates. Special 
thanks go to Mr. Bob Shackleton and his staff at Alumni 
Affairs, and to ODK member Molly Eichoffer, who put in 
countless hours in organizing the event. 

Preparations are already underway for next year's (l^aci^ 
Made Good Awards. Those wishing to submit nominations 
or obtain information may do so by writing Omicron Delia 
Kappa. Grads Made Good Committee, c/o 302 Dodd Hall, 
FSU, 32306. 

Jeff Patterson 
President 
OndofiMi Delta Kappa 

Civil war in Iran a joke 

Editor: 

The comparison being made between the situation in Iran 
today and Vietnam prior to the U.S. withdrawal is smiply 
unfounded. The possibilitv of Iran falling under the 
communist sphere of influence is highly remote. Iran's 
military might, supplied mostly by the U.S. and dreat 
Britain governments, currently out-weighs any opposing 
force within the area. Furthermore, the Soviet's general 
position is in support of the shah. This is based primarilv on 
their ability to buy large quantities of natural gas from Iran. 

Also, considering the shah's intensely loyal military 
forces, the chances of civil war are virtually non-existent. If 
the Iranian dissidents continue with their present approach 
to change, a permanent military government is a very likely 
possibility. 



Letters to The Flambeau must be limite<j to 300 words, signed by fj^^^Jf}^ 
include a phone number and street address The Flambeau reserves me rtgnr ro 
.-edit ail letters for length. Names will t>e withheld on request. The FiannD'^au 
prints all letters which comply with these standards, except '^o^* J^" 
extraneous topics Of n© re»«vance to readers, letters which may be •eQfJ'y 
actionable for reasons of libel or copyright violations, and m case when ie"e^* 
received on the same topic reach a point of redundancy Whether or no» 
opinions expressed aaree with the editorial opinions ol The Flamheaw is not a 
consideration governing publication. 




Letters 



Yankee Jxiater 
gets down on 

Steinbrenner 



h is said that money can buy anything 
and everything. If you doubt this just ask 
George Steinbrenner of the Worid 
Champion New York Yankees 

As Steinbrenner builds a monopoly m 
the Big Apple, the impeccable 
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, sits back and 
watches America's favorite pastime turn 
from Mom's apple pie to mush. 
Undoubtedly the result will be a lopsided 
league which the Yankees will dominate. 

Steinbrenner recently said in a UPl 
story that he was just looking for depth 
for his ball club in case they arc hit by 
injuries next year. At this point the only 
pain the Yankees may endure will be a 
stiff neck when they look back for a team 
to chase them in the pennant race come 
October. 

One can hardly forget Bowie Kuhn*s 



famous bloclcage of the trade between 
Boston and Oakland a few years back. 
The "old master of baseball shenani- 
gans" ' ( harlie Finley tried to sell 
outfielder K»c Rudi to the Red Sox for 
cash. Kuhn stepped in and said Finley 
selling players from his world champion 
team would create an imbalance around 
the league. Maybe the commissioner sees 
the league as being balanced with 
the Yankees just winning the free agent 
war. After all we couldn't bar the Bronx 
Bombers from bidding in the free agent 
draft, could we? No. the free agent draft 
has the potential of being quite a 
successful venture for baseball, but this 
can't happen as long as Kuhn allows 
Steinbrenner to make a mockery ot the 
system. 

It is bad enough the Yankees have a 
rejuvenated Catfish Hunter. Don GuUett, 



Ed Fipwm md the voungster Jim 
Seattle, but they also have claim to the 
Cy Young Winner in left handed Ron 
GuidrN. NoDk Steinbrenner has reached 
into his bank vault and tome up \Mth the 
douiih ti> lure Luis hant troni the Red SiU 
anil lonuTiv John from the Dodgers Oh 
bv the w ay the Yanks onlv have one of tht 
top relievers in the k^amc m hard 
throwing ■■GiK>se" Gossage Inlortu 
nately Steinbrenner's bank roll is not just 
tor pitchers. It has also secured among 
others Reggie Jackson and Buckv Dent 

I just wonder if the excess in the Vanks" 
bank book that doesn't buv the league 
might just expand the salary of our 
trusted commissioner. His quote thai a 
baseball pennant cannv>t be bought is 
about as true as me telling vou that Hon 
Guidry is a shoe-m to lose JO games ne»t 

mmimy 



Sri Lanka seeks cyclone relief 



Editor: 

A national disaster occured in Sri Lanka 
(formerly Ceylon) on the night of Nov. 23, 
in the form of a cyclone which has caused 
eiteiislve damage lo the eoontty. A press 
release states: 

**The cyckme swept from east to west of 
the country, affecting 19 districts. The 
eitent of the damage as ascertained at the 
moment is as follows: 
IMber ef pMpfo aifBcleds 800,000 
Niimlwr af Uaamw affected: 135,000 
Nwdber of howea affected: 80,000 
Ifuilier ef imOm m lepMrtMl-fiev, 27s 373 

''The estimated cost ci the damage is in 
the region of $50 million. The government 
of Sri Limka is In inanediate need of 
disaster assistance. 

"This calamity has imposed a 
tremendous strain on Sri Lanka's economy, 
specially at a time when she has embarked 



on an extremely ambitious program for the 

development of the country. 

Sri Lanka, an island of 25,332 square 
miles belonging to the Third World or 
developing countries mainly due to the 
economic backwardness (but not for any 
other reason), needs universal assistance 
to overcome the unexpected disaster which 
was beyond her control under any 
circumstances. Therefore I as a 
spokesperson appeal to the FSU and 
Tallahasseeans who are members of a 
universal community to come into 
assistance of our fellow human beings who 
arc in a great need at the moment. If you 
believe this to be a worthy cause, please 
write your check to "Embassy of Sri I anka 
— Cyclone Relief" and send to the 
following address: Duicy W. Windsor, 
FSU, 2747.U, Tallahassee, FL, 32313. 




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Vicljiice imminent at Raiford 
prison investigators say 




liy dennis mulqueen 

flambeau staff writer 

The situation at Florida State Prison at Raiford is 
explosive and could erupt any moment, indepeadent prison 
investigators said yesterday. 

The heads of the Florida Clearinghouse on Criminal 
Justice and the Southern Coalition on Jails and Prisons said 
•t a press ooolefeiice that this volatile sitiiation is the result* 
of a recent escape and a oonlrontatiao between guards and a 
prisoner at Ratfotd. 

Death Row inmate John Spenlcelink, possibly the next 
person to be executed in the United States, suffered a 
brodten rib andother lesser injuries in a Nov. 22 scuffle with 
four prison guards. 

Rev. Joseph Ingle, director d. the Nashville-based 
Coalition, said yesterday priscm goards beat a h^less 
Spenkelink unconscious and refused him medical attention 
for two days. 

* 'Walking in that prison right now is like walking between 
two armed camps," Ingle said. '*To say that this kind of 
brutality is warranted is hard to believe.'* 

Ingle said prison guards aggravated an already volatile 

situation. 

Spenkelink suffered a broken rib and various cuts and 
bruises in the incident, prompted by his refusal to return 
dinner trays. Spenkelink wired his cell shut and refused to 
return the trays in anger over not being able to see his ill 
mother. 

"If this type of thing continues, we're setting ourselves 
up for a real serious confrontation at Florida State Prison," 
Ingle warned. 

Department of Corrections Secretary 
Louie Wainwright said in response to the mhh^mm 
charges that "there is no conspiracy to 
harass Death Row prisoners at Florida State 
Prison." 

"Allegations that the atmosphere at the 
maximum security institution is volatile and 
that correctional officers are harassing 
inmates are exa^^ated," Wainwri^t 
said. 

Corrections spokesperson Dee Farrell 
firmly dmed Spoikelink was treated 
unfairly. 

'*Hf was ^set because he couldn't see 
his mother, and he started making 
accusations," FarreH said. When goatds 
approached his cell to recover the dinner 
trays, acccnrding to Farrell, Spenkelink ixAd 
guards * *!' ve got friends on ^ outside and I 
can have you lolled/' 

"There was no excessive force used» 
considering he made threatening state- 
n^nts and was armed," Farrell said. 

Both prison and Clearinghouse officials 
acknowledged Spenkelink was armed with 
only a sock containing a h^t of soap and a 
broom handle. 

Ingle alleged the Death Row inmate was 
denied medical attention for two days. 
Farrell said Spenkelink received immediate 
medical attention and complained only of a 
sore wrist. 

Farrell admitted the prisoner's visiting 
rights had been suspended, but only 
because of an ongoing investigation into the 
Nov. 18 escape of Death Row inmate Robert 
Lewis. Lewis was subsequently recaptured. 

Farrell noted prisoner tension is usually 
at its greatest during holiday periods. The 
incident involving Spenkelink occured the 
day before Thanksgiving. 

"Around Christmas time is the most 
depressing time for inmates — there are 
many more attempted escapes." she said. 

Spenkelink received the death sentence 
for the 1973 killing of a transient in a 
lallahassee motel. His conviction was 




Offe 



Rev. Joseph Ingle 



. . .says Spenkelink and other Death 
Row inmates am being mistreated. 



Spenkelink was armed only 
with a sock containing a 

bar of soap and a broom 
handle during the Nov. 22 

scuffle with guards. 



appealed and is currently before the U.S. 
Supreme Court after being upheld in lower 
courts. The Supreme Courtis decision is 
expected in mid- January, and if his 
conviction is upheld Spenkelink could be the 
first person executed in Florida in more 
than ten years. 

Ingle also charged that two other Raiford 
inmates have been mistreated". Inmate 
James McCrary, an epileptic, has not been 
receiving his medication, Ingle contended. 
Another Death Row inmate, Glenn Martin, 
who has sickle cell anemia, has not received 
proper medical attention, said Ingle. 

Farrell countered that McCrary has not 
been at Raiford since October and that 
Martin regularly sees a doctor. 

"This is another example of a statement 
they made that is completely erroneous,'* 
Farrell said. 'They need to check the facts 
before they say these things.** 

An independent investigation by a state 
prison inspector is currently in progress and 
will be completed later this week. 

Spenkelink received 60 days "discipli- 
nary confinement" for assaulting an officer 
and 30 days for violating a direct order. The 
two charges will run concurrently, thus 
Spenkelink will spend only 60 days in 
solitary cofrfmement. 



r 
I 

I 
I 
■ 
■ 
■ 

L 



Buy one pizza. 

get the next smaller size £cee. 



1 
I 



Inn ■>f T wig t fc l» piimiwno<»lwictaittwpgnq.\^ tilt ooupor 

«tfwn you buy any giant. Im or msdton tin thin erutt pim or «^ ivga sa« 
thick eruot pizza at tha raguiar manu prtoa. wa'H giva you ona pizza o( m« n«xt 

anuriiar aiza with aquaJ rHimbar o( ingradiants and th« sama type cnjat Iraa 
Praaant this coupon with guMt chack 



INN-10 



I coupon' 
Dec. U 



2611 W. Tennessee 
2580 N. MoiuM 
1424 W 



I 
I 
I 
I 

Pizza jLtuisJ 

57M171 
388-3115 

222-3788 



l%zzaiiiii 

''W^ ipoc a isdin^ yoiAe gpnna Ub us»" 




DONT EAT ALONE 
ON CHRISTMAS DAY! 
JOIN 

The meol wW be served at Trinity 
MafhoMSf CmicIi 130 W. Pinfc Ave. 

ToUolMssea, H. 



ISRAEL 



LOW 

COST 

FLIGHTS 

Rasarva HOW 

for Christmas. 
I nter session & Easter 

Israel Travel C.roup 
Cenler for Student TravvJ Inc 
1140 Broad wjtv. N.Y.C 

TOLL mac 

223-7676 





MEMBER FOXFIRE 



RESTAURANT GROUP 



Monday Night is Critic's Night 
oil night hmg Onnks 2 lor i 

in our lounge 

THURSDAY— LADIES NIGHT 
SI .00 oK all Ladies drinks from 9:00 p.m. Ihni closing 
L— Vegaaatyle mtttttlmmmtlmmmUwmgi "Iglitiy 

1713 E. TENNF>>F;E ST. RESERVATIONS 877-2181 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Thui 



December?. 1978 I I 





JUSTINTIME 
FOR CHRISTMAS! 




Pubiix 



IJTCHEN APPLIANCES 

FROM PGBLIX 




TAI>£ 




taOOTAPC 

ITEM 
(Iwidogesf 


$400 TAPE 
rTEM 

caaasMfr) 


»S00 TAI>€ 
ITEM 
(balte'ic o**" 
1 <>«•••< 
tern cruaAvf 
crack eoi) 


f .. 1 

t 

lT€M 


srooTHM 

ITEM 

(HUM*! 


$200 


$5 


$9 


• • 


• • 




$225 


$4 


$6 


• • 


• • 




$250 


$3 


$7 


• • 


^ — . - — 

• • 




$275 


$2 


$6 


• • 


• • 




$300 


FREE 


$5 




• • 




S32S 


FRiE 


$4 




• • ■» 




$350 


FRK 


$3 


f? 


• • 




$375 


FREE 


$2 j 96 






$400 


FREf 


FREE $5 


$9 


$425 


FRBE 


FREE i $4 


- . 




$450 


FREE 


FREE ~t' " $3" ' 






$475 


FREE 


FREE j ^ 


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$525 


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4600 


FREE 


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frk' [" " 


iimMNCe METML VALUES 

Presto hot dogger. $9 95 Presto toaster. $12 95 
Rival hand mixer, $9 95 Rival ice crusher. $13.96 
Presto burger. $1195 Rival crock pel. $12 95 
Rival can opener. $ ii 95 Presto deep fryer. $ i6 95 
Preato bakerie ovan. $16.95 Praato aiactric skiiM. $20.96 

Oaterizar l0-8pMd Meftder $16 96 

* 'does not qualify tor special offer purchaaa 



SPECIAL OFFER 
TO REDEEM YOUR GOLD REGISTER TAPES AND 
RECEIVE THE PRESTO-RIVAL-OSTERIZER 
APPUANCE OF YOUR CHOICE! 

Juat Use tha Table Below to Find the CombifMrtion of 
Gold Ragiater Tapea and Cash to Get 

Your Favorite Kitchen Appliance. 
Offer Good Thru Docambar 23, tSiS. 



! 





'^rir SWIFT'S 

^Vy'PREMIUM BONELESS 

Canned 
Ham 



3-lb. can 




(This is Non-ProTen Beef) 



T^"' 

lonui 

Publlx The, Place for Begf J^Jf 

if T 40N 

U.S.D.A. Choice Non-ProTen B««ilrMfi 

Sirloin Steak \, «2'* 

U.S.D.A. Choice Non-ProTen Boneless Beef 

Round Steaii . ^ 

U.S.D.A. Choice h^n*ProTen Beef 

Rib Steoii «. 

U.S.D.A. Choice Non^roTen BmI 

ditiai BMo Roosi lb 

u s D A. Choice Non-ProTen Boneless Beef 

CIiucIk Eye Roast ib '1** 

U.S.D.A. Choke Non-ProTen Boneless Beef 
(English Cut Roost) 

CInicIi Siloiilder Roast..... 

U.S.D.A. Choice Non^ioTen BmI Hale 

SiMrtRlbs 

Publix Tt^e, Place for Bee/ 

Swift's Premium ProTei^ Beef Loin 

Sirloin Steak ... «> 

Swift's Premium ProTen Boneless Beef 

Round Steak i. '2'* 

Swift's Promium RroTen 

K«y«Mb SlMrfi . . .tr 1^ *a** 

Swift's Premium ProTen Beef 

Chuck Blade Roast ^ 

Swift s Premium ProTen Boneless Beef Imperiol 

Oven Roast 

Swift s Premium ProTen Boneless Beef 
(En^^i^ Cut Roost) 

Chack Stiouidor R— st ^2*^ 

Swift » Premium ProTen Bc^ Plate 

ShoHKibs ». »!•• 



•^SWIF 
GO' 
FRESH 




Deodorant 

Right Guard 'ST ^2^ 

\ 7c Off Label, Regular Or Mint 

Close- Up Toothpaste ^ \ '° 

50c Off Label, Oral Antiseptic 

Signal Mouthwash ti* 49* 

13cOirubol,l«fMl 

AUcG-SeHzer H*^ 

25c Off Label, Regular Or 
Unscented Final Net 

Hair Spray ^ ^V* 

Gentle Publix 

Baby Shampoo b»t' 89' 

THIS AD EFFECTIVE 

THURSDAY DEC 7 
THRU WEDNESDAY, 
DEC. 13, 1978 . 
aOSED SUNDAY... 



From Our Cor\^y Dept. 




Donald Duck Unsweotened 

Grapefruit Juice 29; 

Serve With MulU-t Seo Pak 

Hush Puppies 67* 

Stook-Umm (Gortiiih WiHi Tomotoet) 

Sondwich Steak..., 

SoraleoGefmon 

ChocobteCoke 

Serve With Homburj 
Ore-Ida i Poly-Bog ^ 

Shoestring Potatoes... -^'^ 

Rooms 

Eqq Noodles ^l'^ 76* 

PelidOMS Ootk 

Peanut Buffer logs 83< 

Kraft Miniature (GvMl hi Frwt Soiod) 

Morshmallows 47' 

Brach's Chocolate 

Mint Crisps .. ^ 63' 

Brach's 

Maple Nut Goodies ... 67* 

Brach's 

Spicettes 53« 

Brach's 

Chocolate Stars * 81' 

6onus.Print^ 





PUBLIX 
RESERVES 
THE RIGHT 
TOilMIT 
QUANTITIES 
SOiO 





, ^ SAVE 46c 

GREAT FOR BAKING 
OR FRYING 

Crisco 

48-ozbot. 

$f 89 



Cak:hthat 
Hdkday Spirit 

• >ftNi art two sets of cellar «Mr 
B&W prints 

• Fast Service 

• Publix Quality and 
Convenience 

• Fresh film with pnicesaed 
color print rolls 



Fresh Sliced 

Turkey Ham Tb" 75* 

DeKdowsFolisKOr 

•wHIiLmI ^^9* 

Tosty 

HwiiABacMlMff.. "^"49' 

Zesfy- Flavored 

Cole Slow ...... I. 59< 

Fresh-Made 

Hoagie Sandwich ... 79* 

Fresh-Baked Apple Or 

Dutch Apple Pie 7<:' 

Reody-To- Take-Out Sswthcrtt 

ffriMlCMcli«n ,. *2** 

Delicious ^ 

HalioBi BrecMi C 59* 





1^ 



Oidiet Disposable 

Butane Lighters 
2 u, 99 





fj SAVE lie 
STOKELY WHOLE KERNEL 
OR CREAM STYLE 

Golden 
Corn 

17-oz.can 




SAVE 30c 
YAGO 



eans 

16-oz. can 



SantGria 
Wine 

23.5-02 bot. 

$ ^ 69 




New ZMrfond FrM*n 

(•••'UiMb I. *ir 

Swift s PremiumOrUiiy Mdfrfe 

SKcod Bacon *l» 

Oscar Mayer Regular Or B««l Slyie 

Wieners 

Swiff s Premium I Alt Varieties) Brown N Serve 

5auso9e 'i' »!•• 

Swift's Premiufn Skced 

BoloefMi ScrfCMNI.. ^\ 

Swift's P w rni m w Oeli Thin B— I, Mom, 

Oscar Mayer RegulorOr tt tf S t yit 

Sliced Bologna 89' 

Oscar Mayer Regular Or Beef Style 

Sliced Bolo^nci 

Gwaltney Chicken 

Great D09S p*.,' 99* 

Seof ood Treat 

B«i|f Scflilops C 

Seafood Treat 



l^LOP^DA FLAMBEAU T^irsd3, 



SAVE 4c, 



S«i3«<.Ch*fB<.i 
avi#li. 



SAVE 10c. HmmTu., 



"Sr 79* 



Ihg, Pk>ce/or Doiry foods 



k* Milk 

Vetergent "ir 'l** 

SAVE 16c. 20c Off lab«l Oish washing Oel«fg*nl 

Dawn Liquid 'ZT 

SAVE 1 6c , Economy Pock 

Scott Napkins 'ST 99' 



I4il 



89^ 
99 
59* 




Holly D»l>»» 

Non Dairy Nog... 

Egg Nog 

Margarine 

Tasty Fkkwick 

English Muffins 3 

ButtermiHi Or Country Sfyl* 

PiHsbury'sBrscuits .4 59* 

Great On Baked Potatoes, Oain-Fresh 

Sour Cream 'c*«p 69' 

ftiilo d «ip h io Brand Ham Or WWHi Cht¥— 

Cream Cheese .'. 29* 

Dairi-Fresh 

Light Cream 43' 

Kraft's Individu uW y W ti yU Cheese Food 

Sliced Sharp J;,' 89' 

Kraft i Chunk Styl« ChM««, Shorp 
Chaddrn. N*w YoA Shorp OiMldar^Or 



^EISCHMANN S 

Regulaf 

^••ijrgoriii 



Lib ctn 



79* 



A Nutty Uof Thot's Gon« Bonanosl 

MutLocrf. B9 

> AMMnponinMnt To Any KM Of MmI 

Stecric Buns 4b • 



(Available In Full-Service Bakeries Only) 
mod With OQt*s, Topped With Toosted Atmends 
And Gka«dl With Swoot loM kins, 1 6-oz. 

•0i«iliEtCoiffMCak« 

For Chocolate Lovers! Your FovoritoCpchw 
That's Full Of Chocolate Morsels 

Chocolate Chip Cookies JSL 98' 

McM On Above Items Effective Thurs., Fri. & Sot. Only— 
OMOmber7,8,9, 1978. 

Regularly 15c Each, For A Different Treat, L^ht 
And Airy With Vanilla Or Chocolate Icing 

French Crueiiers 4 49^ 

(A»oifci b le In FwN-Servke 8<dceries Only) 

Price On Above Item Effective Men., Too*., WmI. Only — 

December 11, 12, 13, 1978. 

« 



Regular Swiss 

Kraft's Casino Brand Omom 

With Jaiapeno Pepper 

Monterey Jack 

Armour s Shredded Cheese, 

Mozzaretta Cheese ^ 

Wisconsin Cheese Bor 

Longhorn Cheese C 

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sliced 

Big Eye Swiss 

Dairi-Fresh Small, Large, 
Schmierkase Or Low-Rit 

Cottage Cheese 



S]99 

99c 
63< 

S-|/9 
S]49 



MISOI BEER 

6 PK/ 12 OZ. CANS 
$IJf 

SCHLITZ BEER 

6 PI/ 12 OZ.aNS < 

$1.49 
2 UTER PEPSI, 

MOUNTAIN DEW 

ROSrUROOT 
69* 




C^^lSCONSiN CMflSf 8A8 

'Sharp 
Choddar 

$|59 



'0I^SAVE3Oc 
^ VEGiTABLI 
OR VEGETARIAN 

Campbell's 
Soup 

e $ 



10*4-O« 



[ 




SAVE 44c 
PUBLIX 



Strawberry 
Preserves 






DAMSH BAKERY 
2 lb. HOLHMY FRUTT CAKE 




BAKE OR FRY, THESE FRENCH'S 
U S ffl (SIZE A ) 

Idaho 
Potatoes 

bog ■ 




Ask your Dan sn B.ikery 
Manager aboul orde' ng 
truit cakes tor vovif Qifl 

givng 



^^iyf^OR SALADS 
iijtt^FLAVOR PERFECT 



jyi^FLAVOI 

Mayo 



FRESH, CRISP, TENDER, FLORIDA 

Pole 
^ Beans 

per lb. 

39< 



TO* 



aise 



32-oz. jar 



limit 1 Please. With Otiier Purcliases of SS 
' or More: Excluding All Tobacco Items 




i COUPON GOOD W»( OF DEC 7-13, 197t 

I ASSOtm AUTOCXAT 

S ^Bfe^ CREAM 

j half gal. 

I L^iHT 1 PLEASt WITH OTHER 

PMCSCNTTMn COUPON 



I PURCHASES Of »5 OR MORE. 



58 



PUBLIX RESERVES THE RIGHT 
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES SOLO 

Moke Some Lemenode, C el dcn Crown 

Lemon Juice , 

Chef Boy-Ar-Dee 

Ravioli 64' 

Seven Sem Viva Itolian 

Sdod Dressing 67' 

Pringle's Regular, Cevntry Style Or Ripple 

Potato Chips ^ 97' 

Serve Over Pancakes, 
■ioei^ Log Cabin Country Kitchen 

I Syrup 'L" 

I Boma Strtrafkefty 

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CHOICE 



Bargaining talks begin j 
UFF asks 14 percent 



FLORtDA FLAMBEAU Thufiday. Decemkml, 1878/ 11 




by Jim cox 

flamfetM staff writtr 

United Faculty of Florida wants a 14 
percent raise by July 1 , 1980 for the state's 
4,500 university professors. 

The faculty union made its demaad 
yesterday to Board of Regents' bargainiog 
agents ia the opeaigg mmi of finaadal 
talks lor tiie oomigg |«ar as fvovlded hi tl» 



The naim aatod for a sew 
which wonld provide yearly salary 
hioeases lor state oalmslty system 
faculty. These iacieMes, or steps as the 
uaitm calls tiiem, waM occur at a regular 
nieof Speveent andwoiildbe ia addition 
to oost-of •fiving salary mcreases to keep up 
with hiflation. 

The United Faculty of Florida (UFF) 
collective bargaining team pushed 
unsuccessfully for the policy in last year's 
contract negotiations. This year's proposal, 
if accepted, would take effect on July 1. 

BOR negotiators did not respond to the 
proposed salary hike structure at 
yesterday's meeting at the Florida A & M 
library. 

"We don't want to drag this thing out,*' 
chief BOR negotiator Caesar Naples said. 
**We just want sufficient time to fiiUy 
assess the proposals.** 

"We must be careful," Naples added, 
"because when you create such a salary 
structure, it is. set up to be a permanent 
structure and not <me that is sub^ to 
review each year." 

The union bargaining team is headed by 
state UFF Vice-president Walter Mercer, 
who is also president of the FAMU union 
chapter. 

Naples said the BOR collective 
bargaining team probably would be ready 
to discnss specifics with Metcer and his 




Caesar Naples 









Waiter Mercer 



colleagues in two weeks. 

Another UFF proposal would provide 
salary increases honoring meritorious 
achievements by faculty. Criteria for the 
merit recognition raises would be 
established by individual college boards of 
elected faculty members. Union officials 
said the proposed merit increases would be 
awarded in accordance with clearly 
established guidelines instead of being 
subject to administrative discretion. 

The bargaining teams agreed to let a 
separate committee work out a fringe 
benefits contract for UFF members. One 
item in that contract asked for a 100 
percent employer-paid life insurance 
benefit equal to a worker's annual salary. 
An ahemative suggested by UFF would 
use union welfare trust money to provide 
the life insurance benefits. 

Other items demanded by UFF were 
that: 

• At least 100 distinguished profejssors 
and distinguished employees be identified 
in the university system and granted a 
minimum salary of $35,000. The 
distinguished employees will help to 
recruit new faculty and professional 
employees, the union maintains. 

• AH full-time employees receive an 
adjustment placing them in the next higher 
salary step on or before July 1, 1979. 

• Part-time employees receive prorated 
salary increases and adjustments in line 
with fan-time increases and steps. 

• The lowest paid 80 peroent of UFF 
members receive salary increases and 
advance two salary steps, one on 
September 1 , 1979 and one on July 1 , 1960. 

• Employees who have demonstrated 
inadequate comprasation for past services 
be granted an adjustment in a similar 
manner to the merit mcreases descrH»ed 
above. 



Dean wants Dye to stay 



by danni vogt 



Director of FSU's Policy Sciences Center 
Warren Mazek said yesterday he has made 
no plans to replace Dr. Thomas Dye as 
coordinator of the center. 

Dye Tuesday indicated he wanted out of 
the day-to-day administration oi the 
program, FSU*s cenln' of excellence. 

*'l know what he's saying (about 



quitting), but Tm £9ing to try to change his 
flund,** Mazek said, "because he's done a 
superb job.** Mazek also is dean of the 
CoHege of Social Sciences. 

**lt was no secret from the very 
b^innuig that 0r. Dye, didn't like 
day-to-day administration. It wasn't really 
his idea to (to take the job), he was tafted 
11^ it.** Mazek said, addmg/* 1 knew he 
wouldn*t be interested in doing it past this 
vear.** 



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SU senate allocates money 
D fight civic center changes 



i»y Chris brockman 



Last night. FSU student senators siHrking on candy 
canes voted unanimousiy to give the Floffida Student 
Association $450 for legal services being used to fight 
aflMsndments to the Civic Center contract. 

The amendments eiimtnated a 2,200-seat auditorium 
and a 1,000-car parking garage, and increased the cost 
from $24 million to $33.2 million. FSU student leaders 
iMve opposed the changes on the grounds that students 
will not get their money's worth of the center in exchange 
for the $12 million in FSU student fees that went toward it^ 
construction. 

The 31 St Student Senate also passed a bill that called for 
a change in the senate finance code that would make it 
comply with the present university finance code. A second 
bill allocated $1 .500 to the student senate expense account 
for the lease and eventual purchase of a word processing 
computer. This computer would be used in the student 
senate office to speed the process of typing out the pages 
of the student constitution and running them off on a 
copier. The word processing computer is designed to do all 
that and more, said senate President Randy Drew, who 
introduced the bill and urged its passage. 

The senate also unanimously passed bills transferring 
$4,638 from the executive branch expense account to the 
executive branch Other Personnel Services (OPS) budget 
account to pay the salary of newly hked grmits writer 



Lyndon Storm and awarding $3,000 to the Video Center for 
the pufdiase of a color camera. 

Another bill and a resolution did not fare as well. Bodi 
were tabled or put aside for a later date. The bill proposed 
a slight word change in the student body statutes, but the 
senate wished to further research the proposed diange 
before acting on it. 

The tabled resotuticm asked the senate to request the 
chief student affairs officer, Mike Miller, to look into the 
situation that has evolved over the display of a "racially 
demeaning'' statue in front of the Sigma Phi Epsilon 
fraternity. 

The figure holds a lantern that is painted black, red and 
green, and students contend that these colors, symbolizing 
Afro- American heritage, are being used in a derogatory 
manner. . 

Sen. Brian Hendrick, a member of the Sigma Phi 
Epsilon fraternity, pointed out that the statue was donated 
by an alumni of the fraternity and is a traditional item. 

Similar statues can be found at the Sig Ep houses of 
many other universities. It is just a statue holding a 
lantern, nothing more, nothing less,** Hendrick said. 

Senate leader Drew provided the candy canes. They 
were his Christmas present to the senators, he said, akmg 
with his wishes for a safe and merry Christmas. 

Last night's student senate meeting was the last one 
before Christmas break begins Dec. 13. 



Graduate assistants, £in£uicial aid 
top undergraduate student gripes 



by Chris brockman 



Graduate students as teadiers and 
financial aid are both areas FSU 
uadergraduates expressed a special 
interest in yesterday at the follow-up 
meeting ^die FSU Task Force of 100. 

The tadc force, Ikst convened on Nov. 8 
by Vke-Fresident for Student Affairs Bob 
Leach, met again yesterday in Cawthom 
Hall to discuss the findings <rf the 
ikat meeting. During the first meeting, at 
wMch 51 ttodergradiiate students chosen at 
random by Leach were served dmner, the 
students voiced their opinions about FSU 
and areas they thought needed 
improvement. 

During the dinner, students were asked 
why they had chosen FSU, what they 
thought was best about the university and 
what had been their most frustrating 
experiences at FSU. 

Almost half of the students said they had 
chosen FSU because of the programs it 
offered but some had no specific reasons or 
simply wanted to get away from home. 

The S:tudents thought FSU's best asset 



was the people here. Meeting people from 
different parts of the country and tiie 
world, was often described as being the 
most exciting thing students had 
encountered at the university. 

But graduate students as teadiers, 
described as being ** awful and 
depressing,*' were the main gripes d the 
stu(tents. 

The students also expressed some 
dissatisfaction with the food service, the 
financial aid program and the parking 
facilities. 

In his closing speech. Leach expressed 
his appreciation for the feedback, but 
warned the students '*not to expect the 
improvements to be made by the time they 
get back from Christmas break." 

Some of the problems can be solved just 
by making them known to the proper 
departments. Leach said, but others, like 
the paving of the Dust Bowl, might take 
some time. 

"We're still looking for the money for 
that project, but it has been approved,*' 
Leach assured the students. 



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tf78 FLOHIOA FUUMBEAII 




150 turn out to hear forum on Iran; 
12 give testimony to public defender 



by Jim cox 
Mtf J«if fiUMiguiii 



FSU governmeiit profes- 
sor Marjorie Mowlam 
claims continued U.S. 
industrial and political 
sapoit of the shah of Iran 
may actually liackfire on 
American i n te r e st s there. 

"The eitent of ifanian 
people denoBStrating 
slMMrs that tiie people 
ate trying to tinow off aay 
oi^iae govcfBrnent s ib- 
fhience/* she sM. "M 
Americans don't 
up (their 

bran), it wfll posh the 
people doser and closer to 
the Soviet Union." 

Mowlam, who teaches comparative government courses 
at FSU, spoke at a forum on fran in the Chemistry Lecture 
Hall Tuesday night. The forum included members of the 
student government, the Iranian Student Association, the 
campus ministries association, and numerous other 
campus groups. 

'There is a chance right now for democratic 
development in Iran," Mowlan said, '*but the U.S. 
continues to back a particular regime which will give them 
oU." 

Mowlam emphasized her belief that any post-shah 




Marlorie Mowlam 



government would be just as willing to sell the U.S. oil as 
the present Iranian government. 

More than 150 people attended the forum which 
concluded with a film, of recent anti-shah riots in Tehran, 
the capitol of Iran. 

Abdol All Bigdeli. the ISA spokesperson present, told 
the crowd of 150 he felt charges would be dropped against 
the nine people arrested after the stormy Nov. 15 ISA rally 
at FSU. 

**The potice made a mistake," he said. In other parts of 
the country where simSar ISA rallies ended in arrests, 
Bigdeli claimed '*not a single one of the charges hdd." 

There has been no indication from pfosecBtors, 
however, that the charges will be dropped. 

Twelve witnesses to the fightinghetween demonstrators 
and police at the Nov. tS rally gave mformal statements 
yestefday at Leon County Public Defender's ofike staff 
members on campus seieikig Informatloo about ^ 
inddeat. 

Assistant Public Defender Ed Harvey said some or all of 
the witnesses could be called on later to make srorn 
statements about whirt they saw during the Union 
courtyard demonstration. 

The State Attorney's office is evaluating police reports 
to decide whether felony or misdemeanor chiffges should 
be filed against the mm students itrested at the 
demonstration on charges ranging from assault on a pplioe 
officer to resisting arrest aiith violence. 

Arraignment will probably be Dec. 18, but Warren 
Goodwin of the State Attorney's office said an arraignment 
date has not been formally set. 



Crowd of 
150 gather 
in Chemistry 
Lecture Hall 
for forum 
on Iran 
Tuesday night 




photo by robert o'iary 



Aid from p^QB 1 

added one assistant coonfinalor to his staff. Becai»e ttee 
is less paperw<»k in the winter, lines diould not be as bad 
in January as they were in the fall. 

StiD, says the director, office workers can barely keep 
their heads above water. Latest figures out of Marsh's 
office show 10,568 students receiving $3.7 millimi in aid 
this quarter. With seven counselors to do tiie footwork, 
that amounts to 1,500 students per counselor. 

At that ratio, even if every counselor sees one student 
every 24 minutes of every woirkday in each of the 13 weeks 
in the quarter, 1,400 students would remain unseen when 
spring rolls around. 

••And that's just the students," adds Marsh. "Then we 
have to handle the paperwork. Every student on aid means 
four more pieces of paper.** 

Unless more staff is hired, the situation will get worse. 
As a result of the Middle Income Student Assistance Act 
(MISA) recently signed by President Carter, more 
students than ever are available for financial aid. 

"For practical purposes," says Marsh, "now every 
student at FSU. except for non-citizens, is eligible for 
loans. You know the governor's got four children? They're 
eligible. Even Rockefeller's children would be eligible.** 

Though Marsh still can't know whether he'll have the 



Staff to process so many loans, he*s delighted the loans are 
available. 

•*! encourage any family who feels any financial pinch at 
all to go ahead and borrow. It (ibesn't make sense not to. 
With money on the street going at 10 to 14 percent, that's 
clearly the way to finance. 

•'the big hasade, tiiough, is that the borrower has to find 
a lender. With the state of Florida pulling out of the loan 
authorization business, we're having to rely on banks and 
credit unions and the like to take it over. They're being 
kind of slow about it.'* 

Once people catch on to the significance of the MISA, 
says Marsh, his office is going to be deluged by loan 
applicants. In spite of a disappointing loss of that 
legislative appropriation he had been counting on. Marsh 
still holds some hope that he'll acquire more staff. 

"We are trying to get six new positions, but you know 
how these things go. First you think you'll know by 
October, then by November, and so on. Right now we're 
talking in terms of Jan. 15 or Feb. 1 before we can get a 
definitive answer on our request for people. 

Does he think he'll get yes for an answer? Marsh won't 
hazard a guess. "But," he says, "we're sure going to be 
hurting if we don't.** 



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^ ■ Df:^ce-^t)er 7, 1978 / 15 



Soviets bring their cuiiure in goodwill 



by ton iMTMntoski 

•m/ 



The power of art to slice through barriers 
^,.fh cultwral and ideological was made 
nianitest again yesterday with the visit of 16 
Soviet artists (eight dancers, four singers, 
tn accompanist, an interpreter aad two 
others) to FSU to perform a program of 
Russian daace aad song. 

Witness: 

Early yefterday morning, a handful of 
protesters, associated with the Student 
Struggle lor Soviet Jewry, let up a 
micropboM m the Umm Courtyard to 
beseedi passing students to pet an ead to 

detente with the Soviet Union because of its 
emigration pdHdes. Economics professor 
Abha Lemer spoke brkfly. Yet, the 
protesters couldn't i^tract qMire than a 
dozen listeners. 

By coDtrasl# however, more than 50 
people crammed into Room 303 
Montgomery Gym for a dance workshop 
that was led by five members of the Bolshoi 
Ballet, and another 50 gathered in 
rongmire Lounge at a reception for the 
visitors that was characterized by the 
curiosity typical of two cultures 
encountering each other, on the most part, 
for the first time. 

Surely, art was triumph«it over poKtics. 

Although the workshop began a half hour 
late, the delay was immediately forgotten 
when the dancers walked onto the floor with 
a grace and sense of being that wouldn't 

allow looking in another direction. 



Accompanied by their own ««« 
Drishaena, the dancers p«t a doaea FSU 
dance majors through several graceful 
series of movements. Three Botshoi 
dancers, Natalia Trubnikova, Bena Bendel 
and Oleg Zakarov. johied the studenU at 
the bar and the fdorth, Anatoiy Komaior, 

Ml interpreter. The 
Soviet dancers were eager to point out to 
the students the fine points of some 
"^^'WBcnts: they were enjoying them- 
sehres. 

Meanwhile at the reception, student body 
pwwdent Neil Friedman and the leader of 
the Soviet delegation, Vadim Bekeshov 
each gave a short speech. Both spoke of the 
need for world peace. The speech was 
followed by a question and answer period, 
and informal discussions sprung up 
between the Soviets and the students and 
faculty who gathered to greet them. 

All of the young Soviet artists graduated 
from the Bolshoi Ballet School and now are 
soloists of the Stanislavsky-Nemirovich- 
Danchenko Theatre of Opera and Ballet in 
Moscow. They are in the U.S. on a cultural 
goodwill tour under the auspices of The 
Voices of the Future production agency. 

4c 4e ♦ 

For those who missed the dance 
workshop, the Video Center will air a tape 
of it today at 4 p.m. on public access 
channel 11. 

Also, check tomorrow's Flambeau for a 
review of the Soviet's performance last 
evening, 'The Stars of the Russian 
Ballet.'' 



Arts / Features 



Annual repertory showing opens tonight 



by nature Johnston 



A different kind of show awaits those 
who attend the iFSU Dance Touting 
Theatre annual Repertory Showing tonight 
through Saturday. 

Two guest artists will highlight the 
show. Meg Harper is a former member of 
the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, 
one of the modern dance world's front- 
running groups. She will perform a solo 
from one of her own works, "Long 
Distance.'* 

Also featured is Norma Mastro- 
giacomo, accompanist for the department 
of dance. She will be giving a piano solo. 

The performance can be catted a 
''process event,** which simply means that 
many of the works are in some process of 
development. In fact, the performance will 



be **in process" when the viewer arrives at 
curtain time, 7:15. The dancers will begin a 
one-hour warm-up class at 6:30. As they 
finish their class, and the audience has 
seated itself, the show will move right into 
the evening's offerings with just a casual 
introduction. 

The group will perform selected works 
from their repertory. As the showing is 
informal, there will be no scenery, lights or 
costumes. However, the informal structure 
grants the viewer a more intimate 
experience with the art form. 

Expect a unique experience at this 
performance. Rumor has it that the 
audience will be asked to participate, on a 
limited scale, during the intermission. 

ne lepertory ShawtBg is 0oe. 7-9, at 
7x15 p.Bm 1b Room 403 MoagloBMiy Gym. 
AdbiisaiQB Is frM. 




Soviet dancers at workshop yesterday 

. . . Namfki Turbmka^ {above im^ cenm imkm^ Bam B&nMUmkjw^Mh and 
0/eg Zakarov ibehw far rigM 




/ 

0 



16 ' Thursday, December /, 19/8 F lORI'^^ ^\ AMBEAU 







Tom Morrill is in 'exile' no more 



Review 




ExOeNoMmm, fcy T— MmM^ prfiMrtiii the 

In yesterday's "Privste Lives" cohmm Tom Morrill w» 
described ts a m^n of great capacity for enduring the 
defeat idealists have to live w^. Apart from society, yeta 
memher of that society, an idealist who most submit to the 
alienating reality of a world he cannot transfotm, Tom is a 
man whose internal contracKction has come i^xmt as a 
fimcticHi of his willlingness to embrace defeat, to rework its 
meaning according to his own subjectivity. 

To embrace it, as Tom does, is entirely a subjective 
affair; in subjectivity an original, private meaning can 
arise, and it is here that defeat is transformed into victory 
— the victory of having to stand apart from such a society. 
Contradictorily, that victory is conditioned by defeat; it 
might be said, paradoxically, that Tom Morrill's value as a 
member of society is his rejection of the values, by and 
large, of that society. And to the degree that he is 
unsuccessful, rejected, is he triumphant and accepted — 
by and for himself. This is not to say Tom wouldn't like to 
see the world he polemicizes for; only that, as a creature of 
reason, he cannot realistically expect it to come about. 

Tom Morrill is thus in the position of having to believe in 
what he cannot expect. It takes a complex man indeed to 
sustain such a contradiction as a way of life, yet the irony is 
that most of his friends, acquaintances, and surely his 
enemies see the man as a very simplistic person, guided 
by the ideal of the child-like. But the paradox is that Tom, 
while holding the child-like understanding of things to be 
tantamount to modem salvation, is a very savvy adult who 
is fully aware of the futility — with regard to practical 
results — of his endeavors. 

Exile No More is Tom's coming out from the shelter of 
subjectivity to publish in the world of objective values. 
One will find in this work the straggle between the 
contnuUctory poles of sinq>listic and savvy, and the rich 
middle ground where their tension has produced paeans to 
nature, to humankind, to the dignity of life and death. 

The reader will find in this diromde of Tom's poetic 
maturation tiie outer extremities of the contradiction: the 
sunirtistic, unabashed duld-like style, and, too, the cynical 
knowledge of a worid predicated on the financial/indus- 
trial ruination of tiie primordial. 
Tom writes: 

I looked and saw a fsBing star 

over the hUl beyond the tree. 

I seaidied the grass with greatest em 

hot I couldn't find it anywhere. 

I found a sparrow nesting there. 

Would she be hiding it fro m me 

over the hill beyond the tree? 

and 

(Dedication of Foundlings, a book of children's poetry 

published by him): 

If there is a hell 

and there is 

And I am in hell 

and I am 

I have your poems — ^ 
you gave them to me 
Then it is heaven 
and it is. 

On the other hand, the reader will find: 
Fugitives in paradise, realtors of Eden 
the people of the United States, destroyers 
of religion, are heirs of Christianity. 

On Sunday afternoon, a community of saints 
beer slopped, running radios and idling engines, 
cars and motor boats insolently in, out 
living the holy river with drink cans; 
bloat bellieA; monkey groomed, cigarette hacked 
painted and in plastic curlers. 

With regard to the first two examples, the simplistic, 
child-like side comes, in part, from Tom's having ^ a 
Poet in the Schools, teaching poetry-writing in the fourth- 
and fifth-grade dassroomsi And Tom has professed, both 



in the preface to his book and in oonversation, the 
aesthetic of the child-like. For this reason, he is not 
popular with the "big time" New Yoih pttbhshers, who, he 
states, are '*fiill of do-do.'* 

The internal composition of the New York publishers 
notwithstanding, 1 can a{^itectate their, and others', 
reservatioiis abovt such poems as "The Lost Star." far a 
few other poems, Tom attempts to bring about the 
child-like sense of writing by relying on the buih-in, but 
Mase, expressiveness of such words as "wonderful." It is 
one &ing for chikken to cite expressive words to make up 
their poems, because for a child such words are still new 
and newly expressive; but Tom's use of these words rings 
a little hoDow. He would perhaps object that the 
hollowness is the reader's fault, that we have become 
jaded and lost. But I think what is really important is that 
we are adults whose lot it is to make meaning — poetic 
meaning — * within the suffering that accompanies 
adulthood. 

... it is in his poems of 
nature that Tom truly exults, 
and the reader with him. 



One understands, even appreciates the aesthetic of the 
child-like; but only a child can bring it off. What Tom 
would occasionally ignore is the fall into Knowledge adults 
have irreversibly suffered. Indeed, one manifestation of 
the contradiction Tom lives is that the fall into Knowledge 
— into adulthood — is required for the return to child-like 
innocence to have appeal in the first place. These poems 
are few, and Tom included them in part to show the course 
his poetic development has taken. 

But when Tom Morrill creates according to his deeper 
knowledge of the world, some truly fine poems emerge. In 
"This Day Our Daily Dead'' the confusion, emptiness and 
clattering meaninglessness that obtrudes on all of us 
occasimially becomes enshrined and transfigured. He 
concludes, **We must find ways to do impossible 
miracles; / that is easier than doing without. / 1 would not 
go away and leave death emptyhanded." 

*'Mime Show** lets a meaning arise that is^s poetic in 
its silence as that of a theatrical mime show. 

young girl personifying actress 

personifying old woman personifying 

the dead and clowns tenderiy 

we the audience earth dumb 

dedfened by engines* snarling 

the dead and clowns tenderly 

empty minds fantasy 

sexual egotism amok 

the dead and clowns tenderly 

flower wilting toward merciless sun 

acentric in einsteinian heaven 

the dead and clowns tenderly 

■ enoble a person 
enshrine a silence 
monument a love 
bless a universe 

tenderly the clowns and risen dead 
In "Book Review," occasioned by an oceanography 
book full of scientific explanations, facts, figures and 
statistics, Tom asks questions pertinent to the larger 
context of human existence itself: "Oceanographer: 
Where are your own volcanoes? / your deepest faults? 
How deep is a woman? / You are a man — what is a 
man?" and "When libraries bum, and bum they shall, / 
what will you keep?** 

Yet it is in his poems of nature that Tom traly exults, 
and the reader with him. It is here that his knowledge as a 
biologist is synthesized with his genuine awe for the 
non-civUized world. In '*Ospreyson Bear Creek** the flight 
of two ospreys becomes the symbol of humankind's 
struggle to transcend its landlocked, adulterated 
ccmdition, to follow the "Phoenix rejoicers**. . ."fishers of 
our dreams, / hawks beyond our si^.** The Dhfer, In ^ 
poem so titled, having dived to a great and dangerous 
depth, "touches the virgin pUux / <feep cored m spiral 
essence lost.*' is regenerated, and the "soul-body / 
tortured and rising / all light, all triumph / . . .breathes 
and lives," as the reader comes to understand the 



meaning of such a danng act anew. 

Tom's pix'ms of nature \%erc composed largely dmm 
his stays on the St. Marks River, or at other natural havei^ 
far distant from the turmoil and contusion afforded bf tki 
cities. Here the con tradicti(H| becomes quieted, its faict 
effaced for the authentic realization of natuie, aad 
Man's place in it. "Rhyme and the River" begms, "I com 
to the river rattle- / assed from town, from that world / 
stitttering and / shrieking / 'You / can't"* and continiies: 

Here where days 

flow Kke wMer 

slowly, barely at first 

a uai-verse beats througli 

A Monarch butterfly soars south 
from Maine, nasrbe. toward the Gulf; 
q>iders fat with eggs wmve Mg webs 
because the year is ripe and ebbs. 

The town recedes in egrets* flight 
steady, rhythmic strokes toward night, 
and in the morning they wffl life 

downriver on the heartbeat air. 

To quote from "Liferise at Sunset": 
' An exile stands sweeping water to him 
upstream with a long paddle. 
The keen-prow ed canoe unconsciously 
glided as by some other power 
moves the river under them. 

and: 

Behind over the ocean, the anvil 
continues to stream; ahead gods gather 
He knows it is no longer only a river 
he will praise; nearing the end of exile 
he paddles not in water, nor in air, nor even 
in mystery. Paddling immemorially 
he is Ferryman of Life. 
We are. fortunate to have such work. Tom Morrill, m 
living and continually resolving the contradiction of his 
existence, has much to say to all of us, each of us who 
bears his or her own particular internal contradiction - 
which is to say everyone past the age of reason. In the 
preface, Tom laments that he has not become the man he 
wished to be. What is si^ a wish but a longing for the 
consistency of the superhuman, of a god? Rather, he has 
shown us, in fact, that the real depth of character of a mere 
man emerges as the way in which his internal 
contradictions are handled; moreover, in both 
exemplifying and rejecting the human ccmdition, Ton 
KforriU has succeeded in showing with wh^ d^ity on 
can bear the exile from Eden. 

(£jci/e iVo Afofv la available at BID'S Bookstore, ihriiey*! 
andWaldens.) 



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18 Thursday, December 7 J078 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 




Suggs and Nichols perform 
tonight in the Downunder 



Two of Florida's premier performers, 
Del Suggs and Jack Nichols appear at FSU 
this weekend. 

After working the club circuit for the 
past eig^it months. Suggs and Nichols will 
be returning to the FSU campus to play the 
Downunder on Thursday and Friday night. 
On Saturday, they will be opening the show 
for the Flying Burrito Brothers ta Ruby 
Diamond Auditorium. 

Suggs and Nichols have become an 
integral part of the Florida music scene 
«nce their first appearance together m the 
rammer of 1976. Their nmslcal style — 
easy picking guitars and smooth, dean 
vocals Is both gentle and powofiil. An 
evening with Suggs and Nichols mdades 
their own songs and those written by their 
conteaqporaries hi Austin, NashvIHe, and 
L.A. Most of all, Suggs and Nidiols seem 
to have a good time at what they do. 

As the show progresses, Suggs and 
Nichds take their audience through an 
emotional gamut of serious songs, light 
tunes, stories, and off-hand humor to liven 
any crowd. Their stage presence is almost 
a trademark, the culminating of years of 
performing before various crowds. Suggs 
grew up playing rock and roll throughout 



the South in clubs and military bases, while 
Nichols' early experiences were perform- 
ing in all-night honky tonks. They have 
matured into seasoned entert a iners. 

During a performance, Suggs and 
Nichols play and sing both together and 
alone. Although their combined sound is 
congruent, their solo styles are as 
divergent as thek Hush Bippies^ and 
snake-skm Tony Laau's. Suggs- seems to 
infuse a love of deep Wue ocean and 
backwards country Into a style he calls 
**sattwater music.'* To the contrary, 
Nichols digs back to his roots and typifies 
the country singer by perfomring the musk 
of Hank Wilfians «id m»t Netoon. The 
resulting variety of music has led to fhek 
acceptance by a rapidly growing audience. 

Their last performance at the 
Downunder was in April, when Suggs and 
Nichol^ shared the stage with Gamble 
Rogers. 

• « « 

Don't miss Del Suggs and Jack Nichols 
at the Downunder on Thursday and Friday 
night, with shows at 9 and 10:30. On 
Saturday night, the Flying Burrito Brothers 
will be at Ruby Diamond Auditorium with 
special guests Suggs and Nichols starting 
at 8. 



Cor baby that's really free 



by Steve dollar 

flambeau staff writtr 

Otway and Barrett, John Otway and Wild 
WiUy Barrett, Polydor Records 

John Otway is one wild and crazy guy. 
Not that he has anything in common with 
Steve Martin, who is an asshole, but as a 
performer — musical one at that — he 
ignores propriety and the smooth and 
perfected pop performance in fayor of 
uncalculated madness. 

This summer at a three-day rock festival 
in Reading, England, Otway gave a one 
hour show that could only be called bizarre. 
Singing in an anarchic whelp of a voice, ths 
long-haired crazyman convinced an 
audience of what rock and. roll was all 
about. It's not the rantings and infantile 
ravings of 101 punk groups crawling, 
spitting like sewer rats in 101 London pubs. 
No. that's just a bunch of street kids, poor 
bdys who can't find nothin' to do but play 
in rodi and roll bands. Otway is a genuine 
lunatic who uses an audience as an 
oppcwtunlty to lose his mint md get pmd 
for it. He used to have a partner, a guitarist 
named Wild Willy Barrett, Who was said to 
be as loony as J<^. But tiien they split. 
^iot. however, before recording several 
tearre albums together. ^ 

One Qi them, **Otway and Bartett" 
contains a song that captures everytiiing 
rock and roll (i.e. freedom) is all about. It's 
not mudi of a song really, but the thudding 
bass fined up against tlie outrageously 
joyous guitar of WiM Willy creates a song 
that Otway can truly squelch about. It's 
called *'Really Free" and tliat is what the 
tune*S all about. Pete Townshend can be 
heard lurking between the lines as Otway 
describes his true love, a B-B (that's baby) 
what wakes him up with a kiss every 
morning. Her parents don t like him. but 
that doesn't matter. All that counts here is 
the rebellious refrain — Otway screaming, 
squelching hell, damn near whelping these 
lines: 

Reallv free 



Record Review 



■BBBB 
Reafly free 

ReaUy, really, really free — kick Ine. 

Wild Willy comes back with a Beatlish- 
Berry solo that only serves to electrify the 
proceedings. Otway can't friggin' stand it: 

**Well my B-B comes to me an' she 
kisses me an' I say Cor' baby that's really 
free." 

I like Otway. and Otway is a nut. Well, 
just ask my friends, they know I've been 
corrupted. At Reading this guy gave an 
event, not a concert — doing the parallel 
bars as Olga Korbut, playin' a song called 
**Down The Road" (which also featured 
Charlie Watts) and doing his ripped 
versions of English folk classics. Still, my 
favorite title, available as yet on the 
satisfactory, but uneven, "Deep and 
Meaningless" LP that Otway and Willy 
made this year, is "Look Out for the 
Flowers Cos I Know They're Gonna Get 
You Yeah." 

John Otway did that one live too, and I 
thought it was great. Danni Vc>gt and I 
were fairly pelting the siirly crowd of 
pinheads in front with an empty galk>n of 
Newcastle Brown Ale to make them clear 
out. It was to no aval), alas. They just 
pogoed on. Nonetheless! John Otway Is the 
craziest mother humper to come out oi 
English popular pub music since Ian Dury 
emerged with Kllbum and the High Roads 
m 1974. 

To be sure, all of Otway*s albums are 
rather uneven, half-amazing, half- 
disappointing affairs. But the $5 forked out 
to the Co-op man will end up being worth 
it. Otway is a talented folk stylist as well as 
an anarchistic ultra-rocker. He is as 
pastoral as Fairport Convention and as 
rockin' as the Who (Pete Townshend 
produces much of the zany man's recent 
work). Check him out. This kind of British 
mish-mash mayhem miscellany can prove 
rcwardmj^ on lon^ cold winter nights. 




Del Suggs and Jack Nichols 



.\JSEoc^R. 

• Stlt • TRAM 



ftnCmnmoRfg $^ 




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mediat 



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You have alot to 
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The CENTER for 
Participant Education 



^ Needs Course Instructors^ 
^ for Winter Quarter { 

Pick up course syllabus in the ^ 




CPE office 251 Univ. Union 
or call 644-6577. 



Get 
involved 



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Motivated 



TEACHERS NEEDED IN: 
Dance Politics 
^ Auto Mechanics Religion 
Practical SIdilt Cooicing 
■yi Art Music 
if Foreign Language 




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yllabus in the 4t 
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6677. 

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EDf» W; 
Politics 
Religion 
Cooking 
Music 

Foreign Language 



Actors improve on script 



Ft OP'OA ri AMRPAM Th,,r^^v Decemh'- 

ii'ij^'ii I III 



Review 



by cedric harold 

flambMw writer 

"A Hatful of Rain," by Michael Grazzo, 
had its BrcMMlway opening m NoYmilier, 
1955. and was granted a succets by Hie 
majority of critics. Incidentally, the original 
cast consisted of Ben Gazzara as Johnny, 
Shelly Winters as Cella, lus wife, and 
Anthony Franciota as her b«otfier-in»law. 

At the tnne, play was admitted to 
have weaknesses, such as diched dialogue 
and an unkitegrated narrative structure. 
Bat the honesty and the emotiolia] integrity 
of the tema fiur 'outweighed its faults td 
prevail, as the New Be|idblli said then, to 
be "American theatre at its very best.** 

To be sure, the play also suffers from a 
rushed denouement, excessive sentimental- 
ity, and (worth repeating) widespread 
cliches. The production we have of it, 
though, is of such an enduring quality and 
good workmanship that those fortunate 
enough to see it will be extremely pleased. 

The story is revealed in three acts and 
centers around a drug addict, Johnny, 
whose marriage is difficult both for him, her 



repeatedly comes to his aid and also falls In 
love with his wife. The difficulties are 
compounded by some hardcore thugs ti 
on payment from Johnny for 
rendered, and from the brothers' father: a 
belligerent man insensttive to them even hi 
their childhood. 

As in the Broadway suebess, tlis 
production of ''A Hatful i^f Ram" brings 
together a remarkable cast. Joseph Brown 
as Johnny, and Ten Subrauo, as his 
brother, have a certain middle-class 
Brooklyn look about tiiem. Thehr portrayaJs 
are eiceOent. Bania supplies the nervous 
energy and the erratic emotions of the 
iialac with great oeosistency and feeling; 
simyarly, Subrauo is superh at conveying 
the oomplezities of his character, ranging 
from some very humorous moments to 
scenes of touching pathos. 

Another outstanding performance is 
given by Peggy Sheffield as the pregnant 
wife dealing with her husband's 
inconstancy, her brother-in-law's love, and 
her own needs. Sheffield transcends the 
cliches and the triteness of her character to 
an authenticity which is very crucial to the 

entire play. Her ability to generate depth 
from a stereotyped figure in instrumental in 




Peggy Sheffield, Le Wilhelm and Joseph Baron 



pregnant wife, and his brother. Polo, who the production's success in overcoming the 



obstacles of its script. 

With his overpowering stage presence, 
Le Wilhelm portrays the callous and 
grudging father who feels contantly 
victimized by the actions of his son. The 
sadness of the man, the hurt he 
unquestioningly feels, comes through with 
much power when Wilhelm's character is 
silent, the suffering clear in his eyes. 

The other players in the drama consist of 
a gang of ruthlesr drug pushers; their 



...inascetmtrom "AHatfuiof Hmn" 

mev ei i i en t i and timing contilhnte beauti- 
fully to the adioo of tiie drama. They seem 
as if uprooted from the hacklot of a Warner 
Brothers gangster Urn. Matt Swann is 
Mother: a thoroughly comipted and 
vicious man who gives drug pushing a bad 
name. 

''A Hatful of Rain*' is pbyfaig at Conradio 
Theatre, Dec. 7 through 9. TIdwta free le 



Armatrading proves herself a consumate artist, again 




P^oord Review 

by patti walker 

flambeau writer 

To The limit, Joan ArmatnuUng, A&M Records 

Joan Armatrading is the best thing that has happened to 
music in a long time. She has taken the worn music 
today, molded and blended it and created a sound as 
distinctive as Dylan, as real and alive as Van Morrison. 

The lyrics on this fifth album, Te the Limit, deal with 
matter that could easSy pass for pop. But her phrasing, 
her remarkable voice, her musical expertise push them 
past their limit into a realm of human understan^g tiiat 
shows remarkable sensitivity: 

Ohdarifawl 



Whea weteflwd 
Whca wetriM 
Made Be sene al aR 
Oh 

I 



NewtUa 
That I need 
Yew coofaieas to keep 

To say that Joan Armatrading is a hmnanist would be an 
understatement. As a woman in the music field* it is easy 

to write only for other women, or for mass appeal, but she 
writes for herself, about us all, echoing fragments of pain 
and joy that come from being "alive honey / it keeps me 



alive.** She is an incredibly positive writer in a musical age 
of despair. 

laaMhiribyyea . 

Hearthat 

Yesr Rrt^flfaig to tlie veiees of fe^a 

I aald baby let ma taH yea 

What they're tryfaig to da 

They're out to mate mat lave 

A thing of the paal 

ButlsaMaha 

What we get la the beat 

Her voice is a combinirtion of vulnerability, flexibility, 
and finesse. It is not always particularly polished but that 
is deliberate. **Bottom to the Top'* is a reggae song in 
which she uses her voice to emphasize certain consonant 
sounds to create a percussive chant-like effect. At oth^ 
times her voice wavers on a thin line, as if it will break. 
Instead it stays on that edge; the sound is very vulnerable 
and displays a tremendous amount of control. 

*'Am I Blue For You*' is, in contrast, very smooth and 
polished. Her sound here is low-key, sensuous, night-club 
jazz. 

The thing that makes her music really different is the 

arrangement. Armatrading puts laver upon contrasting 




I 



Joan Annatrading 



layer of different music styles. She will use progressive 
jazz instrumentation, with a bhies/gospel melody, and 
baUad-style lyrics. There is ho standard with which she can 
be compared. She is an origmal musician. 

I fcaew I waat fini 

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Nlee and easy do It 

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Women may not get equal money, says HEW 

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The government Wednesday 
proposed rules that could make colleges pump millions of 
dollars into women's athletic programs, but said big football 
and basketball powers would not be forced to spend as much 
on women as they do on men. 

The guidelines, proposed by the Department of Health, 
Education and Welfare to take effect next September, 
threaten loses of federal funds to schools failing to give 
women equal opportunity in basketMU tennis, swimming 
and other sports. 

Colleges, civil rights groups and other interested parties 
will have 60 days to commeot and propose dianges. 

The rules say that schools generally must spend the same 
average amount on each male and female athlete in 
facmitittg, scholarships, publicity, dmnitofy space, food, 
tutoring and odier special benefits. 

But HEW Secretary Josei^ CaMano said tliere would .be 



some exceptions — on a case-by-case basis — for schools 
that spend and make large amounts on men's football and 
basketball. 

Califano told a news conference that while such schools 
may not have to spend equal dollars on men and women, 
they will not be allowed to discriminate against women in 
sports. 

"The standard of substantially equal per capita 
expenditures must be met unless the institution can 
demonstrate that the differences are based on 
non-discriminatory factors, such as the cost of a particular 
sport, the scope of con^»etition — national, regional or 
local," he said. 

The rules will put teeth in the Title IX amendments of the 
Equal Education Act Congress passed in 1972. HEW issued 
Title IX sports compliance regulations in 1975 but gave 
colleges tiuree years to comply. 



Caiitoo noted that 4.4 million men and 4 million v^omen 

attended American colleges and universities last vtar but 
that only 105.000 women took part in intercoUegiat atiikucs 
compared to 290,000 men. 

He said the average annual athletic scholarship budget is 
$39,000 in a number of schools surveyed, with $32,000 go\n^ 
to men and only $8 to women — even though 26 peicem d 
the athletes are women. 

Besides providmg wonea wUi hunei&rte equal access to 
sports now offered 1^ adioolt, the gnideiMt «e desigaed ii 
the long run to elimiiiate tte Malotie eaq^liasis on mes't 
sports. 

In recent years, women have filed 93 suits charging sex 
discrimination in sports at 62 colleges. Those suits still are 
pending with HEW's 0£Bce For Civil Rights, which will 
oversee the program. 



Student/ athlete 
best describes 

FAMU's Chester 



by Sidney bedingfield 

flambeau sports editor 

He has lead FAMU to 22 victories over 
the last two seasons. Pro scouts monitcH* 
his development closely and sports- 
writers flock around him to hear his 
version of each game, but senior 
quarterback Albert Chesto* has kept his 
priorities in order. 

' *I just want to finish school and get my 
degree,'* Chester said, matter of lactly. 

But the sociology major has done even 
more than complete his schoolwork 
during his four years at FAMU. 
Chester has heen the sparging responsi- ' 
ble for firing up tlw'Katder offense, and § 
fire it up is just what he has done. 

In teee seasons Chester has passed for * ii_ ^ 7~ 

oo Albert Chester 





. . . recenmg mstnicthns fmm Rudy Hubbard kipmpamdon fw ptoy off 



FSU, Gators may have overpriced 
Saturday's game in Jacksonville 



JACKSONVILLE, Fla (UPI) — The 
Florida and Florida State athletic directors 
admitted Wednesday they may have goofed 
in setting a $7 price for tickets to the 
Florida- Florida State basketball game at 
Jacksonville's Coliseum Saturday. 

Less that 5,000 tickets had been sold by 
late Wednesday for the first meeting on the 
basketball court of the two state schools in 



10 years. The Coliseum has a setting 
capacity of 10,000 for basketball games. 

"Maybe we priced ourselves out it. " said 
Florida Athletic Director Ray Graves. 

•*When we talked about it, wc listened to 
input from all concerned. We felt we could 
sell it and honestly thought there d be more 
interest.'* 




mm 

Alias Lynn Magin S band 
Suspicion ol boogie B blues 
Convicted of good time rockin 



I 




Known hangouts: 



TOMMY'S 



y 11 Free admission 6 

iree draft lii U 
tor aU Ladi& 

Wei-Sat 9 pm q 



I 



ORIDA FLAMBF ' 



sdav December 7, 1978 / 21 



HEW 



en and 4 million women 
iversities last year but 
n intercollegiat aUiktici 

tic scholarship budget is 
ved, with $32,000 going 
n though 26 pmeat of 

met»tto eqiwl access to 
ide^et ate iotlgned in 
ric emphadt on men's 

i 93 suits charging sex 
es. Those suits still are 
ivil Rights, which will 



erpriced 
onville 



liseum has a seating 
or basketball games. 

ourselves out it," said 
Director Ray Grmres. 

about it, we listened to 
rned. We felt we could 
thought there 'd be more 



es 
an'! 



admission E 
draft liiu 
all Ladies. 

P Q 



"I LIKE LITE MORZ IrtAN 
I UKE REFS. MUCH MORE; 



Tom Heinsohn 

hunoiift BoskttlbaU Coach 




22 / Thursday, December?, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 








Classified Ads 




IV^LOTONPONO 



(Discount if yOM ifitvnd to build solar ) 



Panasonic turntable* receiver, 
am-fm radio, t-^acfc hooli-up. Ail in 
DM unit. Speaker! separate. All in 
«00tf tend. $90. Cat! Peggy, 2244157. 

SELLING DOUBLE BED INCLUDES 
FRAME BOX SPRING AND MAT- 
TRESS BEST OFFER 222-gS44 

10 SPEED BIKE. NOT OPERABLE 
FIRST OFFER REMOTELY RE 
SEMBLING REASONABLE RE 
COMPENSE TAKES IT. 575-3501 

MUST SELL! Gold rug: 13i/!i'x8'-Good 
condition: 140. Sears Air-conditioner, 
14,000 BTU's; 155. Sct>ool materials, 
ftast) cards for kids. WILL NEGOTi- 
ATEH C1I JOHW: Sn-tm awytime 

Ptiillips Electronic Turntable 

Model 212 less cartridge 
$90 00 ($170.00 New) Call 222-3410 or 
224 3370 Ask for Alan. 

LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN 
on drapes, rugs, curtains, coucties, 
dinettes, dressers, beds, desks, books, 
records & lots of ottier useful 
tiousehold items. Tke Old FasMoned 
General Store 1763 S. AAonroe. 224 1434 
M-F. 12-5:30, Sat 11-5:30, Sun 2-5:30. 

YAMAHA 360 MX 
Good condition, never been raced 
also 

strong 3 cycle trailer witn straps 
Wtiite Stag full wetsuit, excel I cond 

used less ttian 5 times 
Buesctter Coronet excellent cond 
Negotiable, call after 5, 576 4414 

FOR SALE: REFRIGERATOR 2 CU 
FT. Warranty. Price negotiable. Call 

224 4407. ■ 

Special sale at POOR RICHARD'S 
Bean Bag chairs reg. $30 now $19.95 
Leotards 12.50, long scarfs $4.50, gold 
& silver belts, $5. Between Eckerds & 
Publix in Westwood Plan. SM-21flC 
Mon-Sat 10-10 Sun 1-4. 

Poverty stricken student must sell 
one set of Volvo carburetors Fits most 
Volvos $60 call 385 2381 

Need cash must sell (DSansui amp, 
(2)KLH speakers, Rotel turntable 
$175 call 22«a704 after 5. 



DISHWASHER 

NEW WAS $350 USED 6 MOS. 
EXC CONDIT ION $200 575 7347 

GIRLS 10 SPEED BIKE 
inqiiiraat: M4-112f 
rRmS 



Ttie AUCTION is only a phone C«ll 
away....Call, Bkl & Buy M4-f74i 




672 dr Coup deville Cadillac 
excellent cond orig mile 56000 Call 
afte 5051 

W78 Camaro Z-U Mack-tan interior 
4-spead SSM-barrel P.S. P.B. tilt 
steering AMFM stereo caieetH new 
tires $6e75JI Firm CaH Msnkli 

576-3759 

71 TR6 GOOD CONDITION, 
ONE OWNER, LOW MILEAGE 

87B-6737 



71 VW RUNS GOOD. NEEDS 
•ODY WORK. BEST OFFER. 
CALL •70-7534 EVES. 

69 VW AUTOMATIC, RECENT 
TIRES AND BATTERY, AM-FM 
STEREO, $795 CALL IB^Mf 

1971 PINTO RUNABOUT 

Will carry you anywhere 
GMd cond.. AC, htggaot rack 



LING FOR A USED CART 

See the folks at 
USED CAR SUPERMARKET 
asaiW. Tennessee 

VW bus for sate. 1966 model wNti a 
r«toiiilt 69 motor, runs good, tSOO. 



2J"W motor car - $2500 




HONDA 500F 1972 Yosbmura cam, 
Kerkar headers* Kgm, Lockliart OH 
Cooler & Thermostat, Lester Magi, 
Continental tires, luggage rack, 
than new. 575-3501 



HONDA CL125 STREET BIKE VERY 
CLEAN NEEDS MINOR WORK 
CALL 224-ai63 




Nice one t}edroom apartment for rent. 
Near campus, 135 per month, Call 
2227523 or come by 529 W. College 

Very ctase to FSU, fum. 1 bdr. apt. m 

duplex. A C tile bath, water fum. 
prefer grad. student or couple. No 

children or pets. $110 mo. 386 7998 

Sublease spackMis 2bdr furnished 
townhouse, 2ballis, central heatSiair, 
near FSU, TCC, Westwood Shopping 
Center Available Jan. 1. 586 7262 

NEED A PLACE TO STAY OVER 
CHRISTMAS? CALL NANCY 224-1942 
DAYS OR 878 7012 ' 

1 BDRM FURN UNFURN DUPLEX 
EZ walk to FSU beg. 12 15 1 1 $T40 
inci. cable -h utilities. 222-1823 

SUBLET 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED 
APT. IN PENSACOLA ARMS 
JAN JUNE CALL 575-5033 $225 



COLONY CLUB APTS 
1 BRM FURNISHED SI 75 MO. 

224 4529 

SUBLET 1 BEDROOM FURN APT. 
S160 MOH. FOUR SEASONS CABLE 
TV POOL SAUNA LAUNDRY ROOM 
WALK TO FSU CALL 224-5662 

FROM $80 MO. INCL. UTILITIES 
BMUtifvl & charming furnished 
rooms, central heat & air. Ideal for 
students, only 1 bik. from FSU. All 
completely renovated 8> now ready for 
occupancy. Furnished apts. incI util. 
also available. See at HEARTH 
STONE 415 W. College Ave. THE OAK 
409 W. College Ave. 

SUBLET HALE WIAMEA 2 BDRM 
IN FRONT OF POOL, CLOSE TO 
PUBLIX CALL 576 1700 

Osceola Hall will have a limited 
number of spaces available winter 
quarter. For info call 222-5010 or come 
by 500 Chapel Dr. "The Place For You 

at FSU" 

ROOMS FOR RENT ALPHA XI 
DELTA SORORITY $225 PER 
QUARTER CALL DEDE 599-9771 or 

599-9922 

Responsible female roommate 
need ed to share 2t>r unfurnished apt 
w-same at Mission Ridge Apts. $50. 
deposit, $125. per month which 
includes utilities. Come by Apt 146 or 
call 878-5026. Also roommate needed 
for 2 br trailer in quiet neightxrhood 
near Tallattassee sports arena SSO 
deposit S90 per month which toKhides 
utilities. Call tTt-SBM 

Large l lMirm.fum. 3blks. hrom FSU 
$155 incl. cable TV and garbage 
collection. Sorry no pets. Call resident 
mgr. 222 4S0S - 

Large apt for rent(sublet)start w- Jan 
school term S150 includes part, 
utilities. 576-6479-Ken Keep buying! 



FM RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM APT 
w-3 OTHER GIRLS $61-1-16 UTL 
NEAR FSU CALL 576-3904 

HELP! Sublet my gigantic 1 br. apt. 
Take over lease now until June. Gold 
carpet. di|h w a»h ar, disposal, central 
air-haat. FmI« sauna li laundry room. 
Walking distance to FSU. Utila. 
average $20. Unfftirnishatf Call 
576-7*35 or 644-4075 Gragg 



Two bdr twuse near FSU, unfurnished 
ki tctien equipped air, fenced ywnd pets 
ok. S22S. ma. 1-997-2965. MenticeHo- 
evenings. 



looking to upgrade your living condi- 
tions? Here's your ctiance. Quaint 1 
bedroom apt an CoNtga Ava. SUS- 
month Call Gmmn-m-mf mm « 



Country Living: Furn 2 BR house on 
farm. Lg rooms Garden planted quiet 
people only. Avail Jan -r June 79. 
SWO mo. Call t7»-tf94 Saoni 

Sublet 1 Bdrm Fum apt. CatMe, pool, 
laundry. Across from law school $175 
nm. Dec 15 or Jan. 1st Call 222-9344 



i^arge furn. studio apt. $135. month 
I nci udes cable and garbage col lection. 
Dunwoody Apartments, 405 Dun- 
woody St. Ras. manager 222 4505, or 
305-9992. Sorry, no pets. 

Sublet lg 1 bdrm apt $160 mo. Start 
mid-Dec. Keep my $100 deposit. Pool 
ft launtfc-y. 1 block fr FSU. 224-/>27 

Takeover contract at Osceola Hall all 
meals maid service pool sauna TVfir 
nK>re info call Wendy 2243215 




HUNGRY STUDENTS who Idve to eat 
to join our unlimited seconds maal 
plan served in you university 
cafeteria. Forget the hassles of dishes 
and choose from the large selection of 
delicious foods. 



AN AFFAIR BEGAN 
WITH CHARLIE CHAN 

Oil4IHM 

The Cash Hall cockroach racing team 
IS still looking for a jockey for the 
Intramural races Sat. See any crack, 
corner, or floor for nnore information, 

or contact Chit. 

Rmmt wntd for 3 bdrm townlKMise 
apt. 100 mo + 1-3 util 1420 N.-Meridlan 
No.230 (Seville) call 222-9544 

M or F roommate wanted for 3 bdrm 
house prefer grad stud $80-month plus 
13 uts Terry in Geog or 222-4497 

LIBERAL AAALE RMT. OWN ROOM 
$80 + '2 UTIL. CALL KATHRYN 
575 5789. 



WANTED: RIDE TO 
AFTER WED. 13th. 
CALL 224-0603 



New Orleans 
WILL PAY. 



$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ 

INSTANT GASH PAID FOR : 

ALL GOLD RINGS! 
MEN'S CLASS RINGS $10-$30 
WEDDING BANDS $7 $20 
Condition 8. Looks Do NOT Matter 

Weight Determines Price 

$$$$$ALSO BUYING COINS! ! ! ! 

SILVER DOLLARS $4 each and up 
Buying all silver, gold, other coins 
CALL FOR PRICES 

224-0767 Days LEAVE MESSAGE 
224-1734 W.E.-Eves, PHILIP 

S$SS$SSS$$S$SSSSSSSS$$$$$$ 

ROOAAATE NEEDED RIGHT NOW 
MAN. $60 A MONTH PLUS 13 
EXPENSES. IV} Ml FROM CAMPUS 
CALL JOHN OR HIS BROTHER AT 
576-3016 LIKE SOON. 



50 CU.FT.SCUBA TWIN TANKS 
WITH BACK PACK CALL PATTY 
WK. 877 9033 HM. 222 1966 

AAature FM needed to share bedroom 
of a 2 brm V/i bath townhouse $87 -I- 
one third util. Call 576 9578 



ROOMMATE NEEDED - NICE LOC 
NEAR SCHOOL MUST BE NEAT 
CALL SCOTT 575 5441, EVE. , 

Frmmt needed starting Dec. 15 Furn 
apt Sbiocks from cam. SlWmo. plus V^i 
util 576-5067 

MALE RMMT TO SHARE 
2 BDRM APT AT PLAZA CALL 

DAN 222 3541 

Non smoke f rmmt to share 2 bdrm 
apt in downtown area. Prefer serious 
student wtw gets crazy occasionally to 
pre serve sanity. 224-0S74 Susatwie 

Fm rmmt to share 2 brm apt, my fum 
Ifs nice. Near FSU. nonsmokar Itt 
mp 1-3 util Krisiin 575-9000 

Liberal Fern Rmmt to share 3 txJrm 
hse near FSU $75 mo. -l-one- third util 
nice yard 576-5039 

HOUSEAAATE WANTED, BEAUTI- 
FUL HOUSE 1 MILE SE OF 
CAMPUS. LARGE YARDS, TREES, 
WINDOWS. 100 HHOMTN. SPMIM 
EVENING 

Desperately need someorte to take 
over contract at Cash Hall starting 
Winter quarter. $50 bonus 224 1887 

F roommate wanted own room but 
need own bad rent 00 per mo 1-3 util 
tfrh« 10 FSU 3M-79» Keep 



AAALE RMMT starting in Jan Tvyo 
bedrm furn, walk to FSU. $06 -I- 1-3 
UtH Call 576-9972 



ROOAAAAATE WANTED 

$60 mo. -f- 1 3 utilities 
1810 Pepper 575-2124 



own room 



Rm mate needed Jan 1st with 2 brad 
sHidonis Sbdrm 2bath 75.00 mo. -I- 1-3 
Utilities. 85.00 deposit Call Malt 
306-7869anytime Hartsfield Rd. 

FM RAAMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM API 
w3 OTHER GIIILS t51-l-% UL1 
NEAR^ FSU CALL 57»Jli4 

FEM RMMT TO SHARE 2 BDRM 
APT. WRT Oi UTIL R«6SNCY PK 
AFTS AVAIL. QgClS » Mf 13 

Swingshift mother wants female grad 
student to rent room. Rent reduced in 
exchange for babysitting. Call 
306-8743 after 6 p.m. 



Need 1 roomate (Pref. female) neat 
ar>d dependable. 4 bedrooms washer 
dryer — call 57641019 John or Chad 

Roomate wanted targa Sbadroom apt. 
Will have own bedroom. CaM Balwaiw 

10 0. 11 p.m. 222-7074 

Fm. rmt. wanted for Jan. l one bdr 
fum SOS mon. -f V» ele. 575-3358 or 



ROOMMATE WANTED SHARE 
NICE HOUSE $00 -i- UTIL NO 
TOBACCO MAR GOT 224 9689 



Housemate M or F to share 3 br tipuse 
by §tadium Private bedroom $ 1 i» m a. 
& 1-3 util. Call Ron at 5757405 eves. 

Female roomate fo share nice 2 
bedroom house. Washer dryer. Etc. 
Can Debby 877 2534 

Female to share 2brm apt IVa miles 
from campus. Non-smkr preferredk 
222 4517 90 per mo ^ Vi electric. 

Christian Roommate wanted non- 
smoke 100 yds FSU. Split rent 160 mo, 
Vjotil. Laundry, pool AC. MIKE 
644 4562 

F. Rmt needed to share Ibr Furn apt 
Close to FSu $84 Va utilities per 
numth Call 222-6697 

Fm rmmt needed immediately for ibr 

apt close to FSU. $85-l-'juti| 
Nonsmokers only ! Call 222-6762 after 9 
p.m. * . - 

Responsible, clean, non-smoking 
male to share 1 bdr. apt at PLAZA 
Apts If interested call 222 9905 
AFTER 6 p.m. 

Rmt n e ed ed for lg. cooperative house 
near FSU. Share responsibillfiaa, 

food, expenses Call 224 8094 




Permanent part time security guard 
needed for inside work. No Gun. Call 
222-8000 on Thurs 7pm 11pm 8i Fri 
8am Ham. Ask for Mr. Hootman 

FOR THOSE OF YOU OUT IN THE 
BARS LET LOONEY TUNES MAKE 
YOU A STAR 



Waitress & kitchen help _ 
Apply in person this Sun. bet. It 
at 210 S. Adams 
Clydes and Costello's 



and2 



Need xmas money? Deliver nwspa- 
pers 6 dys Dec 24 - 29 -4hrs-day very 
good pay. Also Sndys.305-2341 aWr 5 

0*'..RSEAS JOBS — Summer-full 
time Europe, S. America, Australia, 
Asia, etc All fields, $500 1200 
monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. 
Fr«>e info — Write: Internatkmal Job 
Center. Box 1100 F B B er ke l e y, CA 
94704. 

Leon County Food Co-op is accepting 
resumes for the position of coordina- 
tor. Applications accepted Nov 28 to 
Dec. 12. Those with ttte five highest 
ratings will be contacted for an 
in t e rvi e w to take place on Dec. 17. A 
tfecltion will be reached by the 10th. 
Salaried position based on 30 hours 
p«r w e e k ; fieelth insurar>ce, and 2 
weeks paW vacation. Additional info 
may be obtained at LCFC storefront. 




English teacher will type, proof & edit 
papers, thesis ft dUiartations. exp. 
Call Backy m^m ' 



Keep in tur>e 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNING 
RESTORATION, MOVINGS. 
ESTIMATES 



WANT YOUR GIRL TO BE YOUk^ 
NEXT YEAR, SEND HER A 
LOOMEY TUMC fWJL OP 
2224600 



Typing for shidanlt & busi 
Term Fapars ft Oloa. It yrs 
ence^hone 077-5299 after 6p.m 



Typing — all sorts — 
correcting typewritar — h'anacrlpts 
of tapes. Reliable. Call 576-9915 9 to 5. 

Typing: experienced professional 
secretary with IBM self correcting 
Typewriter 75c to 1.00 per paaa Call 
093-4524. Special rates availaMa. 

Term papers typed. Experienced. 

Can pick up ft deliver Call Evelyn 
576-1755 9a.m. lo 9p.m. Neat Work. 



I HO CNAIR WEAVING AND 

CANING. Good references, reason 
able rates. Call Rhonda around 6 

evenings. 224 0312. 

APFLIANCC REFAm 

Service on all major appliances, air 
conditioning and heating. Sales- 
reconditioned units with 90 day 
warranty. Call Marshall, days 
599-7879 (pocket beeper) 
Evanine HMOM. LICENSED 



New York tour 78 spend wk. in NYC 
Lvs Tall Dec 15 rtns. 22. Includes 
trans and hotel price $143. For dtls. 
FAB or 2221771 or 8703455. NOW 



hillel is sponsoring FrMay night 
SHABBAT SERVICES at 6:30 with 
dinner immediately folkiwing. Reser- 
vations $2.75. For info and ffdaorwa- 
tkins call Hillel 222-5454 

Come boogie with the new t>and in 
town ROUGH N READY, Sat. night 
Dec. 9 9:30 at The Shady Rest 



THe Cerk 'n Claaver is 
dets...te meir aid, mat isl 

To benefit Leon Co. Humane Society, 
the "Cork" is sponsoring a cocktail 
party on Thurs. Dec. 14 4 7pm. $1.00 
will buy a ticket which will be good for 
ANY drink (reg. $130-2.25) Tickets 
available at the "Cark" now, can alta 
be purchased durir>g cocktail party. 
For our canine ft feline freinds, come 
to the Cark *n Claaver en Dec. u.. 



2S7a N. 



St. 



FACIAL ft BODY HAIR REMOVED 
Pern%ar»ently by Electrolysis. Deep 
cleaning facial treatment, Regina 
Arxer, alactrologist. By appointnwnt 
222 3170. 747 E Tenneiioe. Master 
Charge Accepted. 

MEATBALL GRINDER ANL 
DRAFT OR SODA SI J5 at THE PUB 

1312 W. Te nn. llam-6pm Thurs. 

Female companion wanted for flying 
trip to El ufhera. Must tie mature, 
inleliigent ft down ta 
P refer abl y over 21 If 

me for more info R. < 
Circle South 32304 



RECYCLED JEANS bought ft 

Especially need 32 36 waist sixes. 
Great selection of Levi, Lee, a9c 
WO. BULLSHIRT SHOP IB E. 




COUPLE WOULD LIKE TO MCPT 
•I FEMALE ALL REPLIES will 
BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL PO 
BOX 12702 TALLY 3230i 



dorma, GDI s, dubs cu%»om 

Jereays. 06.95 Printed! up the 4 
save nnoneyl BULLSHIRT m S30» 

GAY PEER COUNSELING 
Individual ft canfidential counsetM 
^erad mrangli Univ. Mental HesMi 
Canlar Contact Lucy Kiiirian 6M-M9 

Experienced typist requires fmanciai 
assistance via typmg m my home Ail 
types of typing, including ttwm. «ne 
scientific papers. Price neget. Pliant 
3091053 anytime, 3051312 deys 

Thursday is "SEx n te fh 
Oysters on the half sneii si 25 ooi 
Lowenbrau $2 pitcher, $40 gltn 
7.iap.m. at Brew ft Cue 422 N. Ou»« 

Typing tor students ft bUSinmes.* 

term p agers ft diss. 10 yrs. citperisncf 
— l e 177-S259 after 6 p .m. 

A LOW CLASS BRAT 
PHOM ACOUMCIL FLAT 

ON-OHH 



TAKE THE TIME TO DO IT 

RIttNT. Headquarters has henna, 
perms and great haircuts. Headquar- 
ters 2017 W. Pensacola St. S76-1511. 

Be good to your ha 1 r so t will be good 
to you. Lanham Products now at 
Heaick^arters Haircutting. 2017 W. 
Pensac ola St. 576 1511. 

HOUSE PAINTING 
WALLCOVERING 
PRESSURE WASHING 

experienced & reasonable 
Call Jeff 224-7745 for estimate 

Fast accurate typist IBM correcting 
seiec. -papers, dissert., mss. Linda 
Ourbin 576-1900 



SUNNY DAY NURSERY SCHOOL 
Near FSU. Certified Teachers. 
Hours 7:30-5:30. Call 07741334 



BASS LESSONS 
Jaz2 and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 

JlmCrotiarll44IM 

Professional secretary-typist. Term 
papers, theses, dissart«t^# 
resumes, etc. Rita 575-7961 

TYPING 

TERM PAPERS, AAANUSCRIPTS, 
DISSERTATIONS PH. 575^3495 



NEED RIDERS TO CHARLESTON. 
SC OR VICINITY FOR CHRISTMAS 
CALL 2229576 ANYTIME 

AEROSOL 
THE BRICKS 



ELAAODINE ft AMANDA WILL BE 
OUT OF TOWN FRIDAY NIGHT 
ARE YOU READY TALLAHASSEE? 



G PHI B's: Good luck! 99-s and 
initiatkm to ttie best pledge class I've 
ever seen. I'll miss you, Judy 

DEAR DARTH, 

SORRY I JUMPED TO 
CONCLUSIONS! LET'S TRY AC an 
OK? GUESS WHO 

SHE LIKED IT BEST WHEN SHE 
WENT OUT WEST OH OHH 



THE CASH HALL RANDOV 
NUMBER SOCIETY PROUDLY 
ANNOUNCES THAT TODAY'S 
RANDOM NUMBER IS FOUR 

WE TAKE THE TIME TO 00 IT 
RIGHT Headquarters has henna, 
perms and great haircuts. Heedquer- 
ters 2017 W. Pensacola St. S7i-15ll. 



Be good to your hair so it wiii be good 
to you. Lanham Products now at 
lHadqMartert Haircutting. 2017 W. 
St.57ftU11. 




DEAR MARY ANN, 

DON'T FORGET 
ME NEXT QUARTER WHILE I'M IN 
TAMPA! AND BY THE WAY WILL 
YOU AAARRY ME?? 

LOVECRAflL 

TO THE BTBK KING, 

I'VE NEVER BEEN THERE, BUT 

I'VE HEARD FROM SOME PEOPLE 

THAT TODAY IS YOUR B DAY TOO 
LET'S HAVE A GREAT "21$t". 
JKAK-KAOET 

Need to su b l e a s e Mionvir apt at Piaia 

160nrK> for Jan furn is handmade best 
offer taken asking 250 King bed Iiw 
room and dining call 222 1308 or 725$ 
Ask for Maggie great opportunity! 



DEAR ELMODINE, I THINK YOU 

ARE THE ONE WHO REALLY 
LOVES TWITTY! AND IF THESE 
LITTLE MESSAGES CONTINUE I 
WILL EXPOSE YOUR TRUE 
IDENTITY! A PERSON WHO 
KNOWii 



WHO IS TWITTY? 



Mark you'rea super Delt big brother! 
Good luck on OKams and have a nrMrry 
merry Christmas and a Hippy "t* 
Year. Vaar iWlla sit, Kim 

ATTENTION SENIORS 
Come to the info lounge in union to ge' 
your free portrait made for 
yaarbook-only chance le buy book 



Merry Xmas to 
McCollum. Love 
and Stwtershit 



the guys in 311 
Bigshit, shortshit 



MARK LOVELL you were bornfe be 

kak! Oh well, happy 21st brtlhOiy. 
You now are legal and you deserve if » 

TB 



Smith 6 are dorm champs' congran 
to a great group of gov* * « 
HmnTtLmpitm Yaarcheer.og »am 

NEED SOME HELP ^»3" 
LITTLE LADY, LOONEY TONES 
WIU. OSLIVCR IT SKAOYWi" 

Soup end Sandwich Special, 
Tonight Hot roast beef end 
cheese and soup du ioor V 
TRADING POST, for WJ'L - 1 

potatoe salad too! (5 (» iO:»p m ) 

TOOAY'rTRADING PC^ I5il*L 
FREE medium soft tfrink wW* J^J 
purchase of a ^ot roast oeot 
malted Cheddar for Ji 97. 



Atto 



OWANl 

ladiciic^ yesi 
infidder Urn 
attacking Frti 
hetlKHiglit his] 

homoBCXii^- 
ItiMlle. wi 

Chas 

1,866 yawls 

'Hoopever. 
hasn't alway^ 

Ribault in Jl 
coaches and 
The teain fini 
Chester was 
Many rnajc 
of Tulane ex\ 
went as far 
articulate 20 
knew that v 
degrees, andj 

"That del 
said. Once I 
Chester w< 
have handle 
seen the troi 
and former 
'*! just XV 



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me diHicuit 
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AlptM Lamt i| 
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FLORIDA Fl AMBEAU Thursday Derember 7 ^978 23 




L^^^i-^ L'^^E TO MEET 
lALE ALL REPLIES wiLi 

|02 TALLY 3230t 

I Prmitclf up th« hill *. 

|V PEER COUMSELING 
bi & confidential coun»e r 
h ov^h Univ. AAOTital H^im 
[ontact Lucy KlUrian 144^ 




feed typist requires financial 
v,.i typing m my homa. AH 
f vr ng. including ♦t>a»«s, 

|n/f,me, 385W7days 

s SEX NITE" with 

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studants & bu»ina*»** 

lers&diss. lOyrs ^'"^**^' 
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A LOW CLASS BRAT 
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fiDERS TO CHARLESTON. 
Vicinity FOR CHRISTMAS 

^?9 576 AWyTIME. 

AEROSOL 
THE BRICKS 



llNE & AMANDA WILL BE 
f TOWN FRIDAY NIGHT 
f{> READY TALLAHASSEE? 

B's: Good luck! 99's and 
li to ttie bast pladga Class I've 
Vn. I'll nniss you, Judy 

pARTH, 

]Y I JUMPED TO 
KJSIONS! LET'S TRY AGAIN, 
OUESSWNO 



Iked it best when 

lOUT WEST OH OHH 



Icash hall random 

tR SOCtETV PROUDLY 
PNCES THAT TODAY'S 
)M NUMBER IS FOUR. 

I^KE THE TIME TO DO IT 
Headquarters has hanna, 

bnd great haircuts. Headquar 
17 w. Pensacola St. 576-1511. 



p to your hair so it will be good 
I. Lanham Products now at 
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I' 



AAARY ANN, 
1 DON'T FORGET 

^XT QUARTER WHILE I'M IN 
|A! AND BY THE IHIAY WtU. 
hARRY ME?? 

IE BTBK KING, 
NEVER BEEN THERE, BUT 
lEARD FROM SOME PEOPLE 
frODAY IS YOUR B DAY TOO. 
1 HAVE A GREAT "21st". 

Udet 

subteMo unfur apt at Plaza 

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Maggie great opportunity! 

ELMOOINE, I THINK YOU 
THE ONE WHO REALLY 
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EXPOSE YOUR TRUE 
ITITY! A PERSON WHO 
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TWITTYf 



'ou're a super Delt big brottier • 
luck on exams and have a merry 
Ctiristmas and a Happy New 
[ Your Httla»i».ICIm 

ATTENTION SENIORS 
Ito ttie info lounge in Union to get 
Ifree parlraft made for ma 
»k-only ctianca ta buy book 



Xmas to the guys in 318 
lum. Love Bigstiit, st>ortshit 
^orterstiit . ,^ 

c LOVELL you were bom fa be 

Jtt well, happy 21st birthday! 
>w are legal and you deserve iti 



I 6 are dorm diampaf Congrats 
great group of fuyt •> • s*H>c<' 
^ Keep it upl Vaur dworlnt-fans 

D SOME HELP WITH THAT 
LE LADY. LOONEY TKtNBS 
. OELIVEN IT SHADY ~ 



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lilt: Hot roast beef and "'**J** 
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Attc^ay claims Lucchesi called Randle a homosexual 



ORLANDO (UPD A 
indicated yesterday tfiat New Yott Mets 
infielder Lenny Randle was provoked into 
attacking Frank Lucchesi last year because 
he thought his former manager called him a 
homosexual. 

Randle, who played second base for the 



Texas Rangers, was convicted of battery 
and fmed SI. 000 for slugging Lucchesi an 
hour before an exhibition game ag^in f^ the 
Minnesota Twins at Orlando. 

Lucchesi was hospitalized for treatment 
of a cheekbone fracture, a cracked rib and 
lacerations following the March 2S, 1977. 



incident. 

Lucchesi, now a eomiHaflt §&t Texas 
team, is suing the young ballplayer for an 
unestimated aflMNint of damages (at least 
$2,500). 

Lttcd ws i said Bu tMfV got mad because ko 



was taken from the lineup but defense 
atlornevs indicated <tther\M!>c yesterday To 
prove the {>*>int. they asked William 
'"Blackie" Sherrod. spt>rts director at the 
Dallas Times-Herald, about a news 
conference he attended in Luccbcsi's *" 
four days fr ff f ftttp tknc attarki. 



Chester 



me 



»« 



1,865 yards, rushed for 239 more and been named 
FAMU's most valuable player the last two years. 

However, the football life of the 6-1, 195 pound Chester 
hasn't always been this prosperous. In high school at 
Ribault in Jacksonville he had no problems with his 
coaches and was alternated at quarterback his senior year. 
The team fmished with only two wins on the season and 
Chester was eager to get on to the college level. 

Many major colleges gave him a look but the University 
of Tulane expressed the most genuine interest. Chester 
went as far as to visit the New Orleans campus, but the 
articulate 20-year-old noticed that most of the players he 
knew that went to major schools to play ball didn't get 
degrees, and that is what turned Ch^ler toward FAMU. 

"That degree is the most important thing/' Chester 
said. Once I get tint ttobody can take it away from me." 

Chesler went on to si^ that he was co aBdent he ooiild 
have hamfled the dasswoffc at a major school, Imthehad 
seen the traiMe former Gator Don Gaffney, a dose friend 
and former hi^ school towmte, IumI at GaiaesvOle. 

*'I just tried to learn from other peoplo'ii capcrieBccs, ** 
Chester said, **aBd k'wocmed lake PAiiU was hest for 



It seems Chester has been best for FAMU as well, and 
Chester said he has been slightly surprised at his 
overwhelming success. 

"I've accomplished more than I ever thought I would.'* 
Chester said, refering to his poor final year in high school. 
"Of course, 1 never really doubted myself though." 

Chester said he felt FAMU's 31-3 win over Grambling in 
the Orange RlosscMn Classic was the most important game 
of the year. 

"There was a lot of prestige on the line against 
Grambling," Chester said, "and we showed what kind of 
team we really have." 

"The loss against Tennessee State in the middle of the 
year had a positive effect. It kind of slapped us in the face 
and showed we could be beat if we let up." 

A quarterback all his life, Chester said as a child he 
always dreamed of being a flashy wide receiver, but now 
believes he could play quarterback in the pros if given the 
opportunity. But he doesn't mind directing the twi 
oriealed FAMU offense, even if it does mean less 
eiposnie for his rifle arm. 

'*I can throw die hall as well as anyone in the country," 
Chester said, "hut I'm an rthiytf md I'U do whatever it 
takes to be a wiimer." 



S ports In Brief 



In the losers bracket championships of flag football 
(the best of the worst). Magnolia Basement smashed 
arch-rival Magnolia Second 24 0 For Magnolia 
Basement, 0^ during tlie season, 24 points represented 
its total point output in regular season play. This "new 
look" offense featured Jerold Murry at quarterback and 
Bart Gac^^ halfback, with receivers Henry Duran 
and Steven Tuck leading the aerial homb show. In 
tottmancBt play, Magpwiii BMtMat aooied 70 points, 
wirile hol^ng.ils five opponents to only two TQ'a. 



Today at 3 p.m. the intramural 
sponsor the 4th Annual Field Goal Kicfcfa^ 
on the foothaU praolkse fidd ( iocaie d 
Seminole Basdial Rd^. Those taievealed 
show up to enter. 



departawnt wil 



to the 
need onfy 



The coaKttoa to ban intercoBegiate 
wBI meet today at a pi e drterwh ied tocation 
cause widespread rioting. For mote 
Herman at 57S-9999. 



FSU 
so as not to 



JO'S FOR HAIR 

the difficult we do immediatly, the 
impossible takes a little longer. We're 
tt>e ones to see if you've got 
hair. Call us today. 222-1112 
HnON. 



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Free delivery of graat food to your 
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HAIR 222-1112 1020 N. AAonroe 



ASTROLOGICAL CONSULTATIONS 
Self -developmeirt, Gompetabllity, per- 
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children. Thorough, professional 
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Fred AAc Donald, M.S. 
P.O. Box 20374 

Tallahassee, 3M(M > 

Complete Hairstyling-Wash, cona. 
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neutral or color short ttair or 
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students under supervision of quali- 
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ALL GIRLS INTERESTED IN 
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AAonroe 

JOGGING SUITS. S,M,L,XL 

over TOO to choose from reg. 32.50 only 

$20. POOR RICHARD'S between 
Publix & Eckerd's in Westwood 
Shopping Center. 576^2196 



Rm. 314 University Union 

644-5744 

9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 



ptste-up 

velox services 

If you need 
help with a 

■isume 



'iwesday Nites were made for 

Michelob $1.75 Pitcher 35c glass 
7-12PM at Brew & Cue 422 N. Duval 

Ride needed for 2 to Key West or 
Miami anytime after Dec 13. Will 
share $ and driving. Call Jovce 

Evenings 575-3223 

CAKOE RENTALS on Wakulla River 
a US n. Full day & V> day. CoM 
drinks & beer available. Open 
everyday except Mon. 925^12 



Howard Johnson's Restaurant Rum 
Keg Lounge BudWfflMr draft SOc 

5 7p.m. Mon. -Sat. 

Alpha Lamba Delta initiation in 
Dor man Hail on Dec. 7 at 7p.m. All 
members must gMandl S u nda y dress 

requiredl 

FSU SPECTRUM IS FltMJ^ 
SPOTS FOR WINTER QUARTER. 
ANY BAND THAT PLAYS ANY 
ORIGINAL TUNES NOW IS YOUR 
CHANCE TO GET ON TELEVISION 
FSU SPECTRUM CALL2225503 ASK 
FOR ISAAC ASST PRODUCER 

SIGMA PHI'S 
WHY DON'T YOU CLEAN YOUR 

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FOUND: a selection of delicious foods 
large enough to satisfy anyone^ 
appeHte. The Board Plan served in 

our university cafeteria. Sign up now 

for next quarter in the union m Saga's 
food service office behind the Streak. 

FOUND: at FSU G'ville game gold 
ring with diamonds call STSaSS allar 

f f f f 



lAAMACULATE TYPING i m so 
broke I'm livin' in a tent with nothin' 
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can't afford booze. But I don't want 
your sympathy, just your typing 
business. $ 75 page. Contact Oannl at 
tlM Flamtoaau oNica. 



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Poster 
Btfsineff C011I 

Her 

Brochure 
or NMrsbtter 

Walk on down 




Alore 

"A life 
in Poems'' 

Ton Mon'KI 






Avoilable of 
BSti Bookstore 
Doboy's 



Don't wait to dB yo«r 
ChrittRMM shopping wring 
tin brook. 

SHOP EARLY 
IN TALLAHASSEE. 

Where you'll find tho 
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«««« 





ii 



24 / Thu 



December 7. 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Hubbard readies FAMU for 1-AA play-offs 



toy sidiiey iMdiiHlfMcl 

flambMu sports editor 

The tiny outer office is full of talkative jrtiulait aides* 
Tlie secKtaty is p eriod i caBy placing messages oe an 
already dottered desk apd tke piMMie rings constat^^but 
Rudy HiMatd sits comfortably amidst madnmi and 

smiles. 

Hubbard has a r^ht to smile. His footfoaUjeam just 
recently won its biggest game of the year over Grambling 
and received a play off spot In the newly created divisioa 
1-AA of the NCAA, wfaic^ ooold lead to a natimid 

championship. 

And all this goocTfortene has befallen Hubbard and his 
FAMU Rattier football program at the most opportune 
time — recruiting time. High school seniors are now 
making decisions about next fall and there is nothing like 
the promise of success and glory to lure a prospect into 
the FAMU fold. 

That is uhv Hubbard is smiling amid the controlled 



Small Change 



ooofaiioii tkit ensts hi his elftoe. AnotfMi of the 
seemingly non-stop phone cals breaks HiMaid away, 
and he spends a few mmotes <fiscnssti^ the FAMU 
sdiedute into the receiver. "1 keep hearing about how we 
don't play everybody, bot when it comes down to it tiiey 
don't want to line up/* Hubbard says before hanging up. 

He rocks back in his chair and talks about divimon 
1-AA, the new NCAA division made up of 38 teams. 

"I'm very pleased with the new division," Hubbard 
said. *'It gives us a shot at a national championship and 
gives us a lot of exposure." 

Exposure is something the Rattlers have done without 
before, but that has changed. The regionally televised 
playoff game against Jackson State Saturday will be the 
second televised game this season, and a win in that one 
will put FAMU in the nationally televised Pioneer bowl. 



the title game for division 1-AA. 

But all that is secondary to Hubbard for mm . Now he 
preparing his squad for the game with Jackson State 
toisi he describes as "toagh. tough . . . tough?** 

Hubard shak4» his head slightly for emphasis, hut one 
wonders if this man is realty worried, h seems tht 
tatOers have regited their old donlnaaoe after a slight 
mid*aeason shimp. which means there are few team!; ir 
the country — much les^hi tiie 1-AA — that are capable 
of ^ying with them. 

it is time to start practice and Hubbard heads 
downstairs from his office in Gaither gym and jogs across 
the street to the practice field. The last few pla\crs an 
scurrying out the locker room to avoid being late On the 
field the players are leisurely spread out over the manv 
acres until their coach whistles them together Thev 
charge to the middle of the field, surround Hubbard and 
spontaneously begin clapping and shouting with 



enthusiasm 



like a winning team usualh iWs. 



Local rivalary resumed when 
FSU plays Tallahassee in rugby 



by geraki •nslvy 

flambeau sports writer 

If it's true that "Rugby Players Eat Their Dead," then 
there's a feast in store this Saturday. On that day, at 2 
p.m. on the FSU intramural field, the FSU Rugby Club 
takes on the Tallahassee Rugby club in the fourth renewal 
of what is becoming a heated tradkional rivalry. 

The Tallahassee Oub, one of the giants in sou^m 
rugby, is mainly comprised oi former FSU players^ the 
club having divorced itself from FSU auspices three 
years ago. Tall^idiassee, which has only lost one match this 
year, has won Re state championship two of die last three 
years. Last spring it added another feather to its cap by 
copping the prestigious Commonwealth Cup, which is 
presented to the winner of the Eastern Championship 
staged in Virginia. 

For the FSU cliib it h«s been an up and down seasoii as 
its record stands 4-4, with victories over Jackson U., South 
Florida, and Golden Isles Rugby Club of Orlando. 

According to team captain, Brian VV iieeler, however, the 
season has not been without its bright moments. 

"The key to good rugby is experience and in the past, 
FSU, by virtue of being made up of students, has not 
always played well." noted Wheeler. "This year we've got 
a group of guys that has been playing together three years, 
and we've done much better." 

Wheeler points out that in previous seasons FSU's 
inexperience has resulted in a lack of offense, although 
fairly good defense. This year the Seminole ruggers have 
averaged better than 20 points a game. 

Also working in FSU's favor this Saturday will be the 
absence of several of Tallahassee's better players due to 
injurv. including all-South pick Chip Hartung, who was 
one of the founding fathers of FSU rugby in 1971. 

FSU may also have emotion on its side as at least four 
players close out their academic careers this quarter. In 
addition to captain Wheeler, niggers Gary Troop, Kelly 
Gergen and Dave Fraser will be playing their last game for 
FSU. 

For those who may equate rugby with soccer, several 
differences ought to be noted. The field has the save 
dimensions as a soccer field, 110 yds. by 75 yds., and the 
ball, a plumper version of a foqtlMdl, can be advanced by 
kicking, but there the similartties end. 

in rugby the fifteen players on each side are divided into 
an eigitt man Iroiit line, the scrum, and seven baekfteld 
playm. The hall is advanced by a series of laterals 
(forward passes are illegal), or kicks, with the ball carrier 
forced to surrender^ hall when he is tackled. While the 
fast players generally man the backfield. the larger players 
Budie up tile scrum, with thehr doty being to gain 



possesion of the ball from the other team and give it to 
their backfield. 

Touching the ball down in the end zone (and it must be 
touched down, as the possibility exists of a player 
reaching the end zone but being hoisted back out before he 
has touched the ball to the grouiid) is worth four points. 
The kick afterwards, which must pass through the uprights 
of the goalposts, is worth two points. Penalty kicks, 
assessed at the point of infraction for off-sides and 
excessively rough tackles, are worth three points, and 
again must pass through the uprights. Ruggers play two 
20 minute halves, and only two substitutions are allowed 
and those only for players that cannot continiK (once 
removed, a player cannot return). 

Rugby also sustains a slightly different tradition than 
other sports, especially contact sports. Gallant 
appreciation of one's opponent is de rigeur, as failure to 
congratulate the opponent after the game consitutues a 
ml^r faux pas. Inherent in that sociability is the after the 
game party, where beer becomes the rugger's Gatorade. 
Wheeler pointed out thai ciuc to the nature of this 
Saturday's rivalry, five kegs ha\c already been reserved, 
which illuminates the true intensity of this contest. 




The art of rugby 

. . . members of FSU rugb y club in match earlier tt 



STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE INFORMATION 

Renewal Premium for Winter Qtr. is ciue 1/4/79 



STUDENTS ONLY 

1) 1/4/79-11/19/79 

$63.40 



2) 1/4/79 - 3/26/79 

$21 I 



For dependence cost information and other short term I 

health insurance coverage. ..call 

RAY BUNTON 222-011 1 

WE APPRECIATE YOUR HEALTH INSURANCE BUSINESS 

Underwritten by Industrial Life insurance Company, Dallas, Texas 

CONGRATULATIONS DEC. GRADUATES 



Florida 



Friday 




Christmas wilii m 

Though it may be a Hcde pfCflMilHi. 
The Fhunbaso bids a mefry CMrtnias to 
our readers with tMs israe. bisade. 
beginning on pafe 9. our rofttlsr At 
Week's End sectkm c el ebr ate s tiie 
coming hohday with several ChrittaMS 
features, raaghig frook aa hriWirftar wUH 
a local Kriagle to a look at an 
"Alternative Santa.*' For The Flam 
beau's annual amtmas e di t oiia i. 
page four. 




iillllMHlli 




iieroin not hard to find; 
treatment scarce in Leon 



by gall rowJand 

flambeau writer 

In a run down house in a poor section of 
town three men sit on the water- stained 
mattress that serves as furniture. Carlos 
goes into the kitchen and returns with a 
syringe, a piece of robber tubing and 
enough heroin for everyone present. His 
eyes ate watery and his nose is beginning 
to run. 

*i need tWs fix bad. had a hasste 
getting money today.'* 

How did he fimdly get the heroin? He 
grins, refu^gtotell. Carlos walks across 
the roott, tdjecting everyone else before 
he tics the piece of tubing around his own 
arm and finds a vein in whidi to phmge 
the needle. He s^hs, sets down the 
works, takes off tfie tubing, and sits n a 

comer. .1^ 
**This is the best damned l^b in the 

world." 

A murmur of assent greets his 

statcnicni Is it easy to get heroin m 
Tallahassee? 

' ' Easier than getting pussy if you know 

where to look." 

m • • 

Sgt. Dale Wise of the Leon C oun^ 
Sheriffs Department vice squad apees 
heroin is fairly easy to get. if one know« 
who to ask. He claims that the Twilight 



Zone on Eugenia St. is a local hot spot for 
heroin buys. 

Most heroin purchased in Tallahassee 
sells on the street in dime ($10) and 
quarter ($25) bags. An ounce runs 
anywhere from $1,600 to $2,000, and is 
usually only 2 to 3 percent pure. 
However, last year the Sheriff's 
Department seized some heroin that was 
55 percent pure. 

"This would have killed the street 
addict," Wise says. "These people are 
used to using only 2 percent pure stuff, 
and they'd overdose on something 
stronger. We're concerned about this." 

It is commonly believed that a high 
percentage of thefts are committed by 
addicts who need money for drugs. 
Although the problem here does not 
approach the proportions of larger cities 
tike Tampa and Miami, it still constitutes 
a significant percentage of local crime, 
acoocding to police. Often someone 
arrested on a theft charge will turn out to 
be an addict. What docs the sheriffs 
department do with these people when 
they begin to eapcrienoa witlidrawal 

symptcnns? 
* * We have a Aitt-tiBie nurse at the jail. " 



17 



Mass exodus 
begins from Iran 



TEHRAN. Iran (UPI) — The U.S. 
Embassy yesterday began evacuating 
dependents who "wish to leave" to escape 
expected weekend anti-shah violence. 
Troops opened fire on demonstrators in 
Tehran's bazaar and spreading oil strikes 
cut off the flow of natural §is to the Soviet 
Union. 

Foreign students were ordered to leave 
the capital and return to their homes for two 
months at4he expense of the government in 
an effort to stem student demonstrations 
against the shah's regime. 

Although the Embassy played down all 
reports of mass evacuation, airline sources 
in other capitals said Pan Am was diverting 



many of its flights to Tehran and that 2.000 
seats would be available bv this morning for 
Americans wishing to leave Tehran. 

President Carter said yesterday he hopes 
the shah can survive Iran's bkxxly turmoil 
but made clear the United States will not 
intervene to save him as it did 25 vears at»o. 

With the complementary hands-off 
pledge. Carter was restating a policy point 
U.S. officials have found need to stress 
repeatedly throughout Iran's deepening 
crisis: That there will be no repetition of the 
Cold War power play of 1953. when the CIA 
helped to overthrow Iran's leftist premier, 
Mohammed Mossadegh, and restored the 
young shah to power. 



Wage council denounces 
UFF salary hike demand 



by lioiMfard NMn 



Carter administration officials said 
yesterday that wage denunds made by 
Florida's uinversity faculty union do not 
comply with federal wage and price 
guidelines. 

The United Faculty of Florida presented 
its wage demands to the Board of Regents 
earlier this week, requesting the establish- 
ment of a minimum salary structure and a 
14 percent pay hike over the next two years. 

The 7 percent annual pay increase falls 
within the guidelines set by the President's 
Council on Wage and Price Stability, but an 
administration spokesperson charged that 
hidden wage hikes built into the salary 
structure would violate the council's 
voluntary restrictions. 

"We understand that kind of trick," said 
Joe Carter, a member of the council, in a 
telephone interview. "And it can't move 
to promote everybody and then ask for a pay 
raise." 

"What we're concerned with is that 
actual pay mcreases average 7 percent 
overall." he added. 

The union's proposed salary structure 
would establish five ranks ranging from 
instructor to distinguished professor. 

Without actually being promoted to 
higher ranks faculty members would have 
their salaries increased by being advanced 
one step each year they ^mained in the 



State University System. In the case of 
meritorious service, faculty could advance 

by two steps. 

The salary increases would be made in 
increments of 5 percent, according to the 
union plan. 

Union representatives acknowledged that 
their proposal would place the pay boost 
over the 7 percent limit, set by the council, 
but defend the action as necetsary for the 
survival of the State University System. 

"The salaries in the state of Florida are 
less than mediocre," said Jim Birchfield, a 
member of the FSU bargaining team. "We 
feel that faculty salaries must rise 
dramatically to bring our university system 
up to par with the rest of the nation." 

Birchfield added that the union had been 
planning its proposal long before President 
Carter came along with his guidelines. 

However, the council sees the 7 percent 
rule as inflexible. 

"The president has let it be known that 
he expects everyone's full cooperation on 
this matter." President's council member 
Carter said. "This is a serious program.*' 

Although the federal anti-Inflation 
program is voluntary, the f ov einintt 
encourages cooperation. 

"The government is a major consumer of 
goods and services," Carter said. "And we 
expect government agencies to help in the 
. enforcement of the 7 percent wage ceiling." 



1^ 



Suspicion not enough 
fixr police questianmg 
Florida Court rules ^ 



jof^fS&t says 



gwrnciuanv ^ ^le inum. <i iiiinr^ jiiiHEKiit iiitKiit. ag||iBimB& 
of lie ^dmimsaman aaict ^^esi^niaY 

jttack jpH^ips MBiii iKiMils lame 



iinHiinji 



ifi Jkratnr. T*!^:. ^ 3S aimm^ lis hht 



Special For 
FSU ShidentsI 




ffiiaRitt S^ppc lf-®Biffi 
iiftlfnSlPfRiwdtnae life 



T'.iT;ceriare ircps an [tie SuLaj'd 



HAPPY HOLIDAYS 



J- 



.t 




S&O bucud ends 
funding of clubs 



by dim brockiMn 



The FSU student 
review boird net 
least $500 in 
requesting additioiial 

AkaFicarrm, 
tkat SSOO he flie 



to keep at 
tiie rest to dubs 



of Hk SAO boMd, reqoesled 



to alinegie Ac ir miiBiad ftada to the iwgMM ^f i^in^ Hipy 
fdt nost needed tfie money. 

The G owt— c a t Stedeati Association and Pi Gamma 
Mo received tfic Isfsest dmak of the remaining $554. Each 
hH recehfc «i additional $113. Hk groups will use the 
money jointly to travel to New York and compete in the 
model United Nations competition. This allocation raises 
the amount the groups will receive to S457 and $423 
respectively. 

The FSU Gospel Choir will receive $109 more than it was 
first granted. The group had requested nearly $1,000 more 
than originally allocated to pay for a planned trip, but since 
the board did not have enough money for the entire 
amount and had other requests to consider, the trip was 
axed. The additional $109 the choir received is slated f«r 
printing and purchasing sheet music for the choir. 

The Chinese Student Association will receive another 
$100 to bring the consul generally the Republic of China to 
the FSU campus to speak. 

The India Association and die Art History Students 
Organization will receive the least amount of additionally 
requested funds. The India Association will receive only 
$30 more for postage. This raises its winter allocation to 
$895, the most any g^trap is receiving. Hie Art History 
Student Organization will receive an addkiooal $9 for 
postage. 



Weather 



A recofd high of 81 degrees was set ycstctday fan 
Tallahassee. 

Today, however, variable doodiness Is e xpec t ed wMk a 
chance for showers and early morning fog on Saturday. 
Skies should be clearing by Sunday. 

The highs today and Saturday win be in the low 90s, 

with lows tonight in the 60s. 
Seas will be choppy and from three to five ieet lodi^ snd 

tomorrow. 





Del & lack 
Saggs Mcli#l8 



HUDAY, DECflMifcll t 

0 

9:00 & 11:00 



QQWN 

UNDER 




DOWNTOWN GULF 

W% iff OT il Pvti 9t 



•I 



FLQRIDA_FLAMB£AU Fndav, Decemb tf 8. Jg7 8 / S 

correction 

from Monday's paper 



rert if n Car Repair 



AV^ Muctofiti •nraBMl In 

txjsiness courses MUST attend the first class 
meeting or notify the departmental office in 
writing prior to the first class meetinQ in order 
to retain their space in the claea. 




il Jm WmLdmLi 





OFA^ 
ClOOl 




This weekend, get in the spirit (if 
things with the spirit of the South. 
Rebel Yell. It's our bourbon. Made the 
way we like it. Southern style. Smooth 
and mellow. Get the spirit. And have a 
Rebel Yell of a good weekend. 

yheSpiritof 
theSouth 





[J THIS 90 PROOF BOURBON IS SOLD St| 
liv ONUTBEIXIW THE MASON INXON UNE 




JHE DEEP SOUTH 




l«BL VBjL IBSmi£RV • tJOIJISVIIX£ KEHrUQOr • 90 



4 / Friday, December 8, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Florida 




S^mftthinp diffftrftnt this vftar 



Alternative Santa 



In today s At Week's End section, The Flambeau 
celebrates Christnuis a little eariy with our penultimate 
issue of the quarter. Our writers looked around this week 
and chose to write articles on a commercial Santa Claus« 
Christmas celebrations around the world, the Salvation 
Army and its annual drive for donations at Christmastime, 
and a revolutionary new Arm' of celebration antithetical to 
all the holiday apfiarently has come to mean in tiiese 
modem times. It's called Alternative Santa." 

We've heard it all before about the rank commerciali- 
zation of Christmas, the exploitation of the holiday by 
businesses and stores who are only out to make a buck and 
damn the spirit of the thing, anyway. We've all grieved at 
the death of that spirit as it was crushed beneath an 
avalanche of boxes and packages and shopping-day 
countdowns and neon Christmas trees and rolls of 
wrapping paper and reams of Christmas cards and 
wind-up nativity scenes. We've all been befuddled when 
they started selling us Christmas on the heels of 
Halloween, barely giving us time to wolf down the 
Thanksgiving turkey. 

What we perhaps fail to realize, though, is that the folks 
who own the malls and the stores that popiilate them all 
are somebody's father or mother or brother or uncle or 
cousin or wife or husband or friend. The people who launch 
major public relations campaigns designed to sell the 
notion that the only thing better than receiving is receiving 
even more all were once somebody's freshman son or 
daughter in some state's university t^^tem. 

Any departure from all this we find appealing, and a few 
of the schemes cooked up by the Alternative Santa people 
make for a good jumping off place. Why don't we consume 
less time, money and energy on consumption, as they 
suggest, and spend it on social concerns this year? Would 
it be such a radical departure from the norm if we tossed a 
few coins into the hands of a beggar instead of tossing 
those same coins into the hands of a merchant? 

The Alternative Santa people urge the giving of creative 
gifts we make ourselves; they counsel our making 
donations to combat world hunger with the leftover cash. 

Perhaps instead of gorging ourselves on rich foods 
Christmas day we would find it more fulfilling to fast, and 
reflect on what it's like for those who go hungry. Maybe 
instead of hoping for great gifts this year we can ask our 
friends to give us none, and try to find the joy in giving 
without receiving in return. 

Regardless of race, nationality, even religious 
preference. Christmas should be a time of spiritual 
celebration, not a time of greed and monetary madness. 

When we succumb to the oommerdalization oi 
Christmas, we're not being pawns in someone else's 
game. The game is of our own design. 



FlDrida Flambeau Foundation Inc. business and advertising office 206 N. 
WoocKward Avenue, phone 644-4075; Newsroom 204 N. Woodwaid Avenu«, 
phont a44 g M6; Produdkm/MediatyiM lib 314 UnivmHy Union, phm 

^MMJBntMMt ^tm mi iiMI i d « . MT 4flA I * » • «— * _ ,i m^M s MB ^Mmti^m 

iM^-om% uMOTwo flo 0IIIQ9 uravifMy umon, pnonv ow^ivdi mmmib 
P.O. BoK U-TQOI. Floridi StM Unlvenity. Tili» Hoifcli. 



Steve Watkins — ,. Editor 

BethRudowske News Editor 

Sidney Bedingfield Sports Editor 

K^^^^^L-A* ...AasigUMlNewsBditwr 




Rock *n* roll will never die 



Letters 



Editor: 

I feel a compelling force to 
reply to Mr. Ken Lewandoski in 
his editorial "Blue Money" of 
Nov. 29, since he was so 
deliberate in closing with "OH, 
how long. Lord, how long?" 
Okay, I'll tell you! Rock will die 
when people no longer feel bad. 

Rock will die when boring jobs 
and dead ends no longer bother 
young minded people. 

Rock will die when frustration 
and pent-up urges are sedated by 
total ha|ipiness. 

Rock will die when 2.000 to 
50,000 people can get together 
and have a great time, get high on 
themselves, or music, or anjrthing 
else there and not fear of being in 
danger (think about it). 

Rock will die when politics, or 
other public affairs ^come as 
honest as a performance by a true 
artist of popular music, or when 
everyone there agrees on their 
purpose for being there (think 
again). 

Rock will die when the 
penchance for being avante-garde 

for the sake of being avante-garde 
is purged from the ranks of those 
starving ja// musicians. 

Rock will die when country 



music removes its "hankering** 
for cliches, limited instrumen- 
tation and progressions in 
chords. (Observe Mr. Buffett's 
success of late, or Mr. Willie 
Nelson's or the First Original 
Hank WUliams.) 

Rock will die when no one 
wants to hear it any mcM<e. 

Rock will die when it stops 
diversifying. . .punk rock, country 
rock, urcnch rock, power rock, 
techno-rock. southern rock. New- 
Wave, folk rock, California rock 
(most notably L.A. rock) (Any 
business major will tell you; the 
secret to success fe diversification 
. . .got it?) 



Rock is the medium 



Rock wiU die when another type 
of musk, call it what you will, 
replaces the acceptance and 
interaction that a rock and roller 
trades with the audience, the 
people he or she lives for and 
loves. 

Rock will die when there are no 
more masochists to be rock stars 
left, (contrary to popular bclRf it 
is NOT easy to keep your head 
above water financially and still 
be an honest perftirmcr despite 
what People magazine says about 
rock and rollers. Do you believe 
everything you read?) 

Rock w ill die w hen 1 look at my 
audience and they are bored 
while I'm performing. 

Really Kenny, do write about 
something you DO know 
something about. 



Editors 

This is in reference to the 
article "The long malaise of 
rock*' by Ken Lewandoski which 
appeared in your Nov. 29 issue of 
The' Flambeau: 

Have you heard before, hit it 

out, don't look back. 
Roc^k is the medium of our 
generation; 



Stand for every rfghC, kkk it 

oat, hear you shoot. 
For the right of ail of creation 

Yes, from the song Release. 
Release on the Tormato album 
Try listening to some good 
progressive rock. Ken, it will do 
wonders for your attitude 
problem. 

Rob^Uodget 



'Spirit' review was ignorant 



Editor: 

Congratulations on selecting a 
tieatre reviewer capable of 
demonstrating thf monumental 
level of ignorance exhibited by 
Ms. iCathi Fellers. A modicum 
research would have brought to 
light I) Noel Coward was English. 

2) he wrote plays characterizing < 
British drawing room society, and 

3) he wrote for the British stage. 
In order for any of his plays to 
work, no matter what country the 
performance takes place (provid- 
ed, of course, it is not a 
translation), the dialogue must 
have the flavor of England. Or 
would Ms. Fellers suggest that 
since the pla> was produced here 
in Florida perhaps a down-home 
cracker accent be used simply so 



she could understand the words? 
Of course, the foct that this 
change would erase all tlie 
nuances and subtleties of the play 
is irrelevant. 

Anodier point. The sharp wit 
and fast timing of Coward's plays 
are very dtfficiilt to capture, even 
with reputable professional com- 
panies. I feel that the success of 
this production is a great tribute 
to bo^ the director for developing 
the growing talents of under- 
graduate Theatre majors in 
approaching this very difTicult 
play to a respectable profes- 
sional level, and to the cast for 
quite competently capturing the 
style that Coward's work 
demands. 

Inclosing. I would suggest that 



Ms. Fellers remember that 
though students io the School of 
Theatre are In a training and 
teaming situation, casting them 
in plays tliat are beyond theff 
capabilities woold be an exercise 
in fiBtllity and destruction. Blithe 
Sphrit deariy demonstrates the 
high quality of the training 
received from the director and 
other -actnig coaches, and the 
caliber of our student talent pod. 

Coward does require a certain 
amount of sophistication in order 
to fully appreciate his humor. One 
hopes The Flambeau will search 
more carefully for this quality 
when engaging the services ot 
future reviewers. 

Karen Nixon 



iwhoiMioChertype 
it what you wlU. 
acceptance and 
a rock and roller 
le audience, the 
ihe lives for and 

when there are no 
|ts to be rock stars 

to popular bejief it 
to keep your head 
Inancially and still 
Jperformcr despite 
[agazine says about 
rs. Do you believe 
read?) 

when I look at my 
they are bored 
)rming. 

\y, do write about 
you DO know 
lut. 



kery right, kick 
you shout, 
\x of all of creatioD 

the song Release, 
the Tormato album 
ig to some good 
K'k. Ken, it will do 
your attitude 

Robert Uodiea 



remember that 
Its in the School of 

n a training and 
tion, casting them 
are beyond their 
)uld be an exercisie 
destruction. Blithe 
demonstrates the 
of the training 
the director and 
coaches, and the 
student talent pool. 
?s require a certain 
)tiistication in order 
iate his humor. One 
ambeau will search 
y for this quality 

of 



g the services 
ers. 



Karen Nijion 




Letters 



Censorship call 
was the the 
truly facist one 



We coid&'t pass up tiie opportunity to reply to Pat 
Rogm' letter which appeared ki The Flmitiean on Nov. 
29. In that letter, Eogm chastises your fine paper for 
printing a letter which apparently offended him/her 
simply because it was contrary to Rogers* belief. 

Rogers referred to The Flambeau's disservice to the 
community in printing fascist propaganda. It is not our 
intent to make a determination as to whose propaganda is 
good or bad but rather to assert the individual's right to be 
own opinion and the freedom, if not the duty, of the press 
to publish those divergent views. It is not the right of The 
Flambeau, Rogers or anyone else to decide, through 
censorship, what views the rest of us should be exposed to. 

Rogers seems to be advocating a practice which every 
good fascist or totalitarian is familiar with and one which is 
totally at odds with democratic ideals. In reprimanding 
The Flambeau for printing opinions opposed to his/her 
own, Rogers actually advocates the tactics of the same 
people she obviously despises; aparadoxicai situation that 
would be funny if it weren't so sad. 

XMdaD.Din 



Klan will be canned 

EiHlsrs 

The KMday, Dee. 4 editoi of The Fhunbeau held a 
very important article imperative lo the world of bhick 
America, and to hit home, the black students here at 
Florida State University. 

First of all, I would like to note the opening sentence: 
**We do not bum a cross to show tfiat the Christiaa reUgion 
and the white race excludes darkness, thb is a symbd that 
does not desecrate the cross but rather lights it up to show 
that light expells darkness.** 

Reply: 'tis true that Wizard air fteshener might cover 
the stench, but it can't cover the shit. One can think of 
nothing more desecrating to the cross than it's symbolic 
role in the Klan's racist-asinine-myopic- nurdism. One 
cannot read such statements, laugh, and AFFORD to turn 
away — not again, not if one is black, and not if one is of 
and about the perpetuation of one's blackness in this 
nation. 

Though it's become more subtle in it's actions, the Klan 
is still a dangerous toy to buy for an adolescent society: it's 
too terrible a crime to pardon, too infectious a disease to 
cure, too American in its ideology to completely demolish, 
and too effervescent to digest. Somehow, once again, the 
flipside of all that viscious bull comprising American 
Democracy has been placed on the justice turntable; only 
this time to find that the neighbors don't give a damn 
about volume: no it's not quite the right era for coup d' 
et*ats. it's more or less an era for retaliation of the 
nnezpected kind; and we the black neighbors of the Klan 
areju$taskrtotiiem,astheyassttflM^ themselves to be into 

us. 

No k»8R do we se^ the law. to find that only the ass of 
equality easts for our usage — we've stopped trymg to 
feed our diildren from tiie intesthies of a pig While the 
KUm was deep in htbemation, we roamed the streets of a 
dykig oooititntkm, raped it of all it s benefits, and killed 
the white superionty myth. In just about the time it took 
ttiem to diacover tiiat wooden crosses stiU bum. we 
developed solar energy, tapped its essence; stored all 
eiperlences ^tined stth all kawons learned, and. built an 
-institution of Infra Ray Knowledge" - by way of 
phyanthiofMsts socfa as "Martin Lucifer Coon 
especially for the day so dose to our now, when Dejavu 
(revised by Bfil WiBdnsoo EnseiMe) would reach the 
••Top Ten" chart. I would like to eipress my deep concern 



for the safely of the KlM in today's world. 

True enough, supporters flourish eager to 
cast sail on the ship to Kaditia, iMt tiielr flKccaa can be 
determined by the obm of Mack AoMfka placed squarely 
over their heads and even virihie to the nyopkr. Cast not 
your safl on stiD w^ers; Nero* It mnst he likly slated, 
wears an afro, and speaks of reveafe. Complsccncy Is Ml 
the case, for there Is no need to fi|^ ashifauly with 
oonnier-attidnlty. It bmoie a case of tolid awareness, the 
knd of feeling that nuUkes oae stioiKg and the kind of 
substance th^ b not attainable thnmili caraAri 
pi ep a r a t k m and deoMMdc force. Qm tiie oontiaiy. It b an 
inherent Irak fostered and rejuvenated by generaticMM 
long since renoved timogh generation ever so present. It 
b nKMBtoied by God Almighty; and cannot be wiretapped, 
^qiiolted, detected, nor defeated. And If that don't scare 
you — then wait t9l yon die, yon Klean Knt Klowns, and 
find that HeE is occupied by a lot of little people just like 
you, who had their heart set on complete whiteness only to 
fmd that eternal damnation creates a helluva tan. 

Janice £. Taylor 

'How priceless our future' 

£dltoR 

M students trying to keep our muids attuned to the 
activities brought for us on campus, last Thbfesday n^ht 
we w9!b6l:M'"'I^\.-^. monrle Hearb alld Minds, a 
docomentuy on the Vletnun War brooglit here by CK 
and the Iranian Student Assodatioa. 

Before the movie started, student supporters of the ISA 
staged a scene l>etween the shah and Carter. It ended with 
protestors breaking in and beating them. An hour and a 
half later after seeing the movie in afl its clarity and tni^, 
we came to a somewhat disconcerting reidlzatlon. The very 
people who brought tfie movie to thb campus ironically 
enough performed a mock dbplay of violence, tiie whole 
point of which thfe movie condenmed. 

It seems that the ones that should be the most aware of 
the horror and inevitable destruction that violence brings 
are the very ones supporting it. 

Let us open our eyes and not forget how priceless our 
future is. 

Holly Hanessian 
Sarah Edwardson 



r' ^P'OA AMBEAU Friday,, December 8. 197B ' 5 

More Iranian harrassment 



Apparently Iranian studenls shonld prepare flNmneN ea 
for more harrassaient by American potior forces. 
Accoiding to The New Yotk Post, fonr SAVAIL leadert 
Hew to U.S. ««■ Tehran to lui— iaii new airntegy 

with their U.S. counteinarta. 

sarveUlance, and to reerall 



God Mess the CIA-type of 



DON'T EAT ALONE] 

ON 

CHRISTMAS DAY! 

JOIN 

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Ave. Tallahassee, FL 

11:00 AM - 2:00 PM 



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GREAT GIFT IDEAI 




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loco's of gift ideesi □ Posters □ 

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WESTWOOD SHOPPING CENTER- PENSACOLA STREET SM-mO 



"WE MAKE YOU FEEL GOOD! 



it 



Friday December 8 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBFA 



Letters 



Students' conduct 
disappoints writer 

Editor: 

I am normally the type of person who. when an^, lets 
tlie anger boil and bobble inside of nie« until it eventually 
subsides. However, today something happened that forces 
me to go against my tradition and let it out. 
^ The problem that I am concerned with is the conduct oi 
indents at this onh^ersity. Before I ever came to college I 
had the misconception that college students were a mature, 
serious group of people who were concerned with the 
problems that life offers. But, as I said, that was an 
unfortunate misconception on my part — based on my 
experiences here at FSU. • 

Today in my physics class our instructor decided to give a 
lecture on the energy problem, in light of the announcement 
by Shell Oil Company that it would be rationing gasoline for 
the next four to six weeks. The instructor went to the trouble 
to present a series of slides in order to illustrate the urgency 
of the problem. I felt that this was one of the most relevant 
lectures I have attended, but evidently many students felt 
otherwise. When they found that there were no formal 
lecture notes to be given, one by one the students packed up 
their books and walked out! I found this particularly 
distracting, since each time someone opened the door to 
leave, the room was filled with light and the door slammed. 
Whatever compelled them to be so rude is beyond me. But 
what really bothered me about this incident, as trivial as it 
may seem, is that it displays (rather obviously I must say) 
the selfishness and apatiiy of so many of the students here 



at FSU. How can problems as serious as the energy crisis be 
approached seriously under these circumstances? 

! wouldn't be writing this letter if this was an isolated 
case. However, this is only one of many similar events that I 
have observed. I feel that my complaint about the student 
body here is justified; I have spoken with many of my 
friends about this and they feel the same way. 1 am not 
sitting in an ivory tower condemning anyone, because 1 
know how easy it is to concentrate on what I need without 
really thinking about anyone else. But I do think that it is 
necessary to realize that other people have needs which are 
just as important to them as mine are to me. Furthermore, 
we need to learn how to work together to solve our common 
problems. What I saw today makes this virtually impossible. 
It is with these things in mind that I appeal to the student 
body here at FSU to try to be aware of one another and to at 
least attempt to amend our shortcomings. 

MflwT. Brawn 



virtually every student, except for non-dtiteiia, the 
opportunity to receive a loan. 

1 viould think the administration would be more conscious 
of the fact that many students would not be enrolled at thb 
university if not for financial assistance. Also it is a great 
possibility that a more efficient financial aid counseling 
program could attract more students to the university. 

Students receiving financial aid are not in a minority. The 
financial aid program should not be a low |niortty operatioa 
to be overshadowed by other university programs. Ever)- 
student should have the right to proper financial aid 
counselling, even if it means confix>nting the administratioii 
for prompt action. J idgtng from the way other programs 
within this mriversity system are run. we need more people 
like Edward Marsh, courageous enough to take a firm 
position and pursue the bureaucratic red-tape. 

Kichard F. FerreU 



Praise for Ed Ntcirsb. ^^'©rliiii, Grindal vital 



EcHtor: 

As an FSU student and participant in the CoQege 
Work-Study Program, I would like to thank The Flambeau 
and E. Edward Marsh, director of financial aid, fwr taking a 

stand concerning the financial aid dilemma. On the surface, 
most students utilizing the services of the financial aid office 
would blame the chaotic situation on those in immediate 
<:ommand (i.e. secretaries, counselors, directors). Actually, 
the troubles run much deeper. 

Personally, I do not understand how Mr. Marsh has been 
able to oversee this office and at the same time retain the 
sanity of his staff and himself. As mentioned in the article 
(Flambeau, Dec. 7) the financial aid office is understaffed in 
ratio to the amount of students it expected to assist. Mr. 
Marsh pointed out that the office handles 10,568 students 
receiving $3.7 million in aid. This figure excludes the 
increase burden which will be brought on by the Middle 
Income Student Assistance Act (MISA). The MiSA enables 



to inmate program 



In reference to your Nov. 6 artlcie concerning the jogging/ 
meditation group currently operating at the Tallahassee 
Federal Correcti(mal Institution in cooperation wHh FSU. 
while references were made to the program's director. Dr 
Alexander Bassin, professor of criminology, and jogging 
advisor. Matt DeZee. criminology instructor, credit must 
also be given to John Ferlini. graduate student in 
criminology, who coordinated the program and handled the 
administrative details concerning the group. Along with Dr. 
Bruce Grindal, professor of anthropology, the combined 
efforts of these four individuals helped to create a positive 
and healthy activity in which the inmates at FCI could 
become involved and subsequently carry on successfully 
outside of the institution. 

LmijTi 



FOUR 
SEASONS 
AFIS. 

Furnished and 
unfurnbhed 1 
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^ UNIVERSITY 
BOOKSTORE 

APPRECIATION WINNERS 

Ethel Miranda, Yvette 
Blackmm, Cheryl Lowndes 
Cr Ronnie Jenkins. 

As in last year's drawing, the 
distaff skie swept all prizes. 
CongratMlatk^ns. 

Your University Bookstore staff 

wishes to thank the campus 
[community for interest and support 
given us thru the year. 

WE WILL CONTINUE TO MAKE EVERY EFFORTj 

TO PLEASE YOU! 



Your 

University Bookstore 




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FLORIDA FLAMKAU Friday. Dtoimbef % WW / 7 



k' more OMttcioiis 
enrolled at this 
[Also it Is a great 
il aid emnieliiig 
k university. 
|n a minority. The 
jpriority operation 
] programs. Every 
)er financial aid 
|he administration 
ortier programs 
iced more people 
to take a firm 
[tape. 

Richard l.FMrali 



•ning the jogging/ 
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[ration with FSU, 
im's director. Dr. 
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8 / Friday, Oscember 8, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



• • • 



Low bid for Senate waLv way is $47,700 



by dMfiift imikiiiMil 



Florida taspayefs woo't have to pay $100,000 fBr the 
CBttvcflieaoe of ooa senator after alL 

walkway cw ine cri B g the finth floor of the Senate Office 
ftittdiag and the new Capitol were fir below ori^nal 
estimates of $100,000. The low bid of $45,700 waa snhndtted 
hy Caillle ConstiuctloB Co. of Tallahassee. 

Oinendy, only tbt second and third floofs of the two 
buildings are connected. Persons on the foorth floor wishing 
to go from one to the other must either take the stairs or an 
elevator down to the second or third floor. 

The only senator whose office is located on the fourth floor 
is Dan Scaborough, D- Jacksonville. But Scarborough has 
called the project unnegessary and a waste of taxpayers* 
money. 

Located on the same floor, however, are the committee 
rooms of Governmental Operations, Commerce, Economic 
and Consumer Affairs, and Ways and Means. 

Five firms submitted bids to the Department of General 
Services, which is in charge of the project. The high bid was 



$68,462. Ih>m Albritton-Willianis. also of Tallahassee. 

The Ml were solely for constraction of tie waflsway, and 
exclude necessary office remod^ng associated with the 
project. 

New offices to the Senate Secretary, the Senate 
Prestdont Pro-tem and the Governmental Operata 
Committee must be built to aooommodate the 
passageway. 

The Ajax Construction Company, whkh is in charge of 
building the new offices, put the total cost at $25,000. 

The simultaneous reconstruction of Committee room A, 
which houses the Senate Ways and Means Committee, has 
cost taxpayers $32,000, according to Ajax President Block 
Smith. 

The Ways and Means Committee has 23 members, but 
the capacity of flie room is only 17. 

The Senate originally appropriated $175,000 for 
construction of the walkway and relocation of the offices. 

House Speaker Hyatt Brown who has publically voiced 
opposition to the project, stopped short of calling it a 

taxpayer ripoff. 



Brown told The Flambean that m inch proiect has been 
considered bf the Honse. 

*Tlie reaion the Ifonae isa*t pttttmg hi a walkway Is it*s a 
part of onr exeidae profraa,'* Brown chocfclid. « 

**We think it*s good exercise for House mcmb ei s to 
walk.*' House Majority Leader Sam Bell chimed fai. 

Main proponent of walkway Is Semite President Phil 
Lewis, wholMs aaid it is neeessary. 

Senate Secretary Joe Brown, whose ofBce b being shifted 
because of the addition, said the new crosswalk i:> a 
**needed and worthwhile project." 

**It is not just for the benefit of one senator on the fourth 
floor," Brown said. •*lt is for 40 senators. 200 staff peopk 
when (the legislature) is in session, and last but certainly 
not least, the general public." 

Brown said the wattway shonkl h^ been hidnded hi the 
original building. 
"I bkune the arehtort," he added. 

A Department of General Services official said the 
contract should be awarded to Carlile. the lowest bidder, 
before the end of the week. 




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Who else should play Santa but 



Private Lives 



by danni vogt 

Msistani news editor 

"The trip down from the North Pole was very pleasant, I 
took an Eastern flight, and then I rode an elephant here. It 
went without a hitch. Ellie was really a nice elephant she did 
tricks for the kids, and the kids ioved'it." 

Santa Clau s , otherwise k^own as John Grove , for now lives , 
at the Northwood Pole — an oasis of cottcm snow and 
mechanical elves busy making Christmas mean more to kids 
than mountains of toys. 

While taking children (and a few grown-ups) on his lap for 
25 hours a week atthe Northwood Mall, Gaus promotes the 
illusion of the jolly man who descends from the Arctic each 
year to clandestinely hand out wealtii. 

He made his entrance to the mall the day after 
Thanksgiving astride an elephant as a promotional play. 

"When kids a^if I'm really Santa, it*s wierd, because I 
have trouble lying totiiem. When they say, 'Are you the real 
Santa Qaus?', I say 'No, Fm not, I'm one of his helpers.* 

''Generally they say 'Well is therearealSantaaaus?' and 
1 say *Go ask your mother.'*' It's like sex you know, I'm not 
going to tell them how sex happens, but if they're asking I 
think they should be dealt with truthfully. 

"I don't tell them there's not a Santa. There was a little 
child whowas hanging around the door just a minute ago, she 
wanted to see me without my beard — she knows for sure — 
tonightwhenlgetoffif she's still out there I'll show herwhat 
I really look like. Santa really has a red beard. 

"The commercialization of Christmas is a bit much 
because I have a kid, and I know Christmas is personally 
gonna cost me, to take care of one eight-year-old child, 
around $350, and that's quite expensive. They've turned it 
into a commodity, Christmas is a commodity. 



"Even the adults, the ladies — and even some men have 
come up and sat on my lap — but everybody wants. And 
they're joking and they're up there having fun with Santa, 
but what they're saying is: * Hey, I want a Mercedes. I want a 
nice paying job. 1 want you to get rid of my .old ex-bttsband 
who's a real pain in the ass.' 

"So everybody still wants and I think it' s basically a greedy 
season, which might be good to get ilout so the rest of the 
year we can be normal. 

"But kids ask for things for other people too, like 'I want 
my mommy and daddy to be happy' or something like that. 

" It' s really pretty easyj its not that hard. 1 just sit around, 
right? Then the other thing is the money. I'm only doing 
anything in life for the money. 

"Sure r m in it for tire money , but the joy comes — and this 
gets a little bit serious — but there's tiiis 26-year-old man, 
whose mentally retarded and hangs around the library, and 
he came over and he believes! 

"He says 'You know Sajnta Claus; I really love you. * And I 
get all welled up — the (emotion. 

"The regular children, they're all basically the same. 
They want Dancerella — all these mechanical dolls that start 
around $30. 

"All the boys want TCR —Total Control Radng. It's 
outrageous: go-karts and motorbikes. 

' 'The most requested toys are the TCR (a slot car toy with a 
jamming car). Then the other thing the boys want: Star 
Wars! ! They cant say Star Wars dolls, and we have all these 
little dudes running around, 13-, 14-, 15-year-olds, who ask 
for Star Wars figures, but I know they're dolls right? 

"And some of the girls make that transition. A lot of the 
girls are asking for choo-dioo trains, even Kttle 
six-year-<^ds. which I think is good. And I say 'Whaddya 
want, a truck too?' You know, push that ERA staff. 'You're 
equal. You can have a truck, baby.' 




John Grave 



The new Santas don 't want to sell razors anymore 




St. Nick has tunedaa^leaf. Accordtng 
to Altenuitives, a natioBal aHematlve-life- 
styleedscatloDgroop, SaatahMiiaditwia 
the gross obmnierdalization of die hofidiqr. 

'Tmtired of bdug takealbr a fide every 
year by the people who are oat to make a 
buck at Cbrirtnas," a new ** 



Santa" said at a 
spomo tedbytiieotganizatioa. "rmfediip 
with seeing «qr image used to hype Nopete 
shavers." 

"We're just sick and tired of the over- 
commetciaiization of Christnias," ttid 
Elaine LMny , mi orgaslBer fof tiie program. 
"Instead of going out and buying, buying, 
buying, people should be coocemed wi& 
sharing of themselves." 



Attematives, founded in 1973 by a 
minister in Jackson, Miss., has been 
pushing for less-commercialized holidays 
since its inception. AMemative Santa is the 
latest brainstorm for cattyk^ thnr 
message acroas to the pnblic. 

"The stores start earlier every ytmt, 
po^ag ap deooratioBS aad bringing in 
Santa to pfonole their prodact. Chfiitiiaii 
shouldbeatiRieof ilMriBg. aotjaatabfg 



99 



Santa's or alternative Cbristnas 
movements in over 350 romawiaitif ■ 
n aihm rnitf T iwaghfT wif i H Hl i liavfVftlff 
triddc ^ to the praipafli*s fl ( Htef la 
Washington, D.C. , Lamy feels the Idea baa 



tufn to ALTERMMUM^ 




•J 




Alternative 



from page 9 



sfter 



fOCten a great start. ^' 

"Wc won't really know how it will go aiitil 
Christmas," she said. "But we've got groups all over 
pledged to organize alternative celebrations, and about 50 
individuals who called to participate.*' 

Alternatives has also printed up an Alternative 
Celebrations handbook (now in its fourth printing) that 
describes various ways to enjoy the holidays without 
guzzling egg nog and spending hours inside crowded stores. 

"We want people to reduce their consumption and 
redirect some of their time, energy and money to more 
important social concerns," Lamy said. 

Alternative Santas, along with local alternative groups, 
will be going to malls and schools across the natkm to 
promote the idea of a non-commercial Christmas. 

Suburban sh(^>pers may see a blue-jeaned, overaUed St. 
Nkfc making polaroids Willi Hie kiddies in exchange for 
donations to world tauter cnnses or local charities like the 
Salvation Army. 

Or. while store-hired Santas ask toddlers what Utty want 
ander the tree on the big day, ahemative Santa mi^ ask 
elenMntaty sdiool kids to give up tbeir &vorite toy for aJess 
fortunate chid, aS in the spirit of sharing. 

Wlui6 there are no alternative Santas locally. 



aboirt IS people allowed up at a 

* 1t*s just getting started tikis 3Fetf, but w€^ 
people that they didn't have to spead a lol of 

celebrate Christmas." 

Abler said the group was urged to give creative gills, and 
when they spend money, to give at least ten percent of theh' 
gift budget to causes like world hunger. 

** Santa is just an ad gimmick — an alternative Santa can 
put the Saint back in St. Nick,** Ahlers said. 

Jean Vaught. a co-ordinator at the Wesley Foundation on 
campus, has also been in contact with the national group, and 
calls their booklet "a Chamber of Commerce horror story.*' 

"Alternative Santas can be a great consciousness raiser 
for little kids and everyone," she said. "Where stores might 
say * pose with Santa for $5 . ' and alternative Santa could do it 
for free and give out literature to help people celebnte in a 
different way.*' 

The booklet . utges organizers to hold rallies and 
demonstrations to pronwietiieircaaae, niingtiMi aUt matin. 
Santa as a focal point. 

Santa with a picket s^? 

Weil, probably not, orgaMzerssi^, but if Ibe al tei nnt i w 



BQcka may soon iKe a cfaalenge. 



a m 



by the^United Ministries Center eatUer this quarter. 
According to Rev. Jack Ahlers, co-director of the center. 




47471. 



Group identifies new lows in toys 



WASHINGTON (UPI) — A consumer group yesterday 
gave its Christmas toy **booby prize of the year** award to 
what tt called a new low in technology — a doll dea^ied to 
develop diaper rash. 

Ibe group also ^fidn!t tbhik n»ist of "Alvin the 
Aardvaik," "Tobor" the robot or •'Mr. Qnarterba<±" — a 
^ring-loaded <kvice whidi hurls a plastic football across 
the room and amies equipped with four pages of 
warnings. 

The ratings were made by the Consumer Affairs 
Committee of Americai^ for Democratic Action which 
conducted a price and quality survey of Christmas toys in 
the Washington area. 

The booby prize went to "Baby Wet 'n' Care," a blond 
doll which breaks out in diaper rash after the child mixes 
orange-colored tablets with water and feeds it the solution. 
There is also a second lotion solution to remove the rash. 

•*1 just can't imagine a child wanting a toy that gets a 
pink mess on her rear end," said Ann Brown, head of the 



group. In addition, she said, the process "makes rather a 
dangerous precedent" by introducing children to {hU 
popping, even though the tablets are non-toxic. 

She also said the whole idea "is not biologicaUy sound," 
tidies a near diemist to mix the ingredients properly and is 
expensive since "Baby Wet 'n' Care's" 
diapers cost $3.1S — more Aan a box of 
diapers for a real baby.^ 

The group branded the footbafl-tossing madiine the 
"most dangerous toy of the year" because it requires 
strict adult supervision; said the push toy aardvaik was 
disappointing because it really didn't ffick anis around as 
the TV commercial mdicates; and panned tiie robot 
because its antenna was snapped off when it came out of 
its box, rendering it unable to perform iits radio controlled 
maneuvers. 

The group said there are some good toys. It singled out 
for praise "Alfie," a rol>ot game machine, and a Fisher 
Price toy tool chest. 



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A foreigji Christmas : 
cognac and street song 



by jim cox 

flambtau staff writtr 

Wart hogs as reindeer? Rice soup as a 
substitute for turkey? Rubber trees ralbec 
than evergreen cedars? 

Although many Americans may consider 
the activities of stocking and stomadi 
stuffing the only true forms of Christmas 
celebration existing, the fact Is tfaat 
Christmas is observed world-wide in 

ffloltitttdinoiis mauiars — eves in Bttdd^st 
dominated oooBtiieslilieCe^ooiHudi have 
nominal connections w^ mid^Eatleni 

religions. 

Gentries ago. Christians nrissionaries 
roamed from Kotaborn to Wanchou trying to 
Christianize the worid's heathens. If these 
missionaries did fail to unpaganize, they did 
not fail to spread the holiday spirit associated 
with the Yule-tide season. 

In Nigeria^ the Christmas 
sessan means (clothes 
for the beggars and 
alcohol for the rich 

Resulting from this miasma of this lightly 
altered Christian tradition are many varied 
forms of Christmas-tide merriment as there 
are branches of mistletoe on a large oak. 

In Nigeria, where many missionaries still 
exist, the Christmas season means clothes 
for beggars and alcohol for the rich. 
•They beat the talking drum," Kehinde 
Anifowoshe, an FSU student from Nigeria 
said. "All the people come out and give food 
and clothing to the beggars in the street." 

The beggars, who have made 
pan -handling a profession, often discard 
their own apparel the instant they receive 
hand-me-down shoes and shirts from the 
well-to-do. Anifowoshe described the 
traditional foods given to these beggars as a 
form of levened bread with the consistency of 

a baked potato and a form of soup made Witt 

rice. 

"The bread we cafl eba," he explained, 
"and the soup is obe. But many also give 
dollars to tile l^eggars. 

The people's oot-door involvement is 
whatAi^fowoshefiedsisthe greatest point 
of distinction betwete I^geiia and the U S. 

"ThecfaOdrentl^y sing in tte streets aad 
we hawe iirigo, wiiidi means people go door 

to door until they gel fiOed-np wiHi 
drinking. '* Anifowoalieexpia&ied, iMwever, 

that kiriyo was an event perfofmed by the 
middle and upper classes. . 

' 'Mainly it is a time for all religions tooome 
together," he emphasized. "In Nigeria, 
there are 30 percent of the population 
Moslem and 25 percent Christian. But even 
so the Moslems celebrate along with the 
Christians and all offer a prayer for the new 
year." 

In Iraq too, where almost 70 percent of the 
population is Moslem, the Christmas and 
New Years season means a time for all 
religious groups to celebrate and to give to 
the less fortunate. 

"In the schools operated by the 
government they give new clothes to the 
diildrenofthemoslem and christian poor," 
said Moayyad Rassook, a Christian from 
kaq. 

Razzook is a FSU doctoral candidate in 
physical education and hopes to return to 
Iraq with his wife and chUdren after 
graduation. 

On CbiptwuitHwr CagiatiCTS go early to 



church and come hone to eelebtale with 
turkey and cognac." he added. 

"In the afternoon they make a big table 
wrth the torlKy and dl dMetent types of 
foods." Razzook e^lalned. "And if there is 
aoteno tt^eogaac or die host don't have the 
awBey to buy it. th^ they use whiskey 



' The Iraquan medhim of gift-giving also 
<iififorc noticeable from the down-the- 
(^imney-umter-the-tree act performed by 
the angfiam Saing Nicholas. In Iraq, a 
character described by Razzook as 
"Babnoel" places the presents on the bed 
about a sleeping person's feet and leaves the 
room without a sound. Razzook said that 
breakable gifts were not given because of the 
practice. 

"Though we have a different kind of tree 
we decorate," he mentioned, "a manger 
scene is placed at the bottom of it and on 
midnight of Christmas eve, the child Jesus is 
placed in the crib." 

Perhaps the greatest difference, though, 
lies in the Iraquan celebration of New Years 
where masquerading couples, both 
Christians and Moslem, halt traffic and pack 
the bars till the wee hours of the morning. 
The highlight of the evening, Razzook 
claims, occurs at midnight where instead of 
darkening the room and kissing, couples 
breakdawish-boneandthe person receiving 
the larger portion is bestoi^ with hick and 
happiness for the coming year. 

The observance of Christmas differs 
noticeably also in Greece where 90 percent of 
the population bdieves in a Biblical savior. 

There, the means of gift-giving is not 
through Saint Nicholas, though, but rather 
Saint Baai. Arktotle McIk^xmiIos, a 
graduate student from Greece, said St. Basfl 
was a tax coUector for the Roman Legions 
occttping Greece daring the feorth century, 
AJ). According to leg^. St. Basil 
redistributed smafl pmts of these taxes by 
placing coins in bread and then distributing 
tiiebtead tote masses during the Yuletide. 

"Whoever reeeived the bread wHb a coin 
had good \wdk and fortune the whole year." 
Nfichopoulos added. He also said that in 
addition to the bread, that Greeks ate 

Even sOy the Moslems 
celebrate along with 
the Christians and all 
pray for the new year 



traditiofial pastry. Melomakafoono. 
OttistBMa andepii9ed freshly made yogurt 
. for New Years day. 

"Thediildrenalsosingin tlieftrects." he 
said refering to tfie sfaiging ki fraq and 
Nigeria. "But they have special songs, or 
kalanda, which are dUfuent for Christmas 
and New Years." 

They go around and receive money for 
their singing," he added. "In large cities, 
you can make a lot of money this way." 

All three foreign students felt their 
countries were quickly conforming to the 
turkey traditions prevalent in America, but 
added there was still a higher level of 
on-the-street festivities typical of New Years 
day here. 

'*I have enjbyed seeing the traditions 
here," Razzook concluded. "We have been 
to Christmas celebratons all over the U.S. 
during the vacation from school. But for 
her," he said pointing to his daughter, "I 
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CHEECH 9t CHONG are the comedy team that gave birth to rock comedy 

and in the process of turning on a whole generation, sold ten million albums, 
picked up numerous awards, including Cash Box and Billboard's best comed|> duo, 
and a Grammy for their adbum. "Los Cochinos." 

Now it'^ time for a CHEECH & CHONG nrKAie 

C ft Cs "UP IN SMOKE" will make you feel veiy fuM^ 

So don't go smri^ to see this nKHid 




12 / Friday, December 8, 1978 AT WEEK'S END 

Bolshoi Is performance 
was technically perfect 



Review 



liy rarture Jnhnston 



A llt^ over 1,000 free student pesses 
were gone widiki the first three horns tkA 
the Leisure Plrograai Office was open. The 
pec^e who stood in line tiiat morning for a 
diance to see die stars of die Bolshoi and 
Stanislavski ballet and opera were 
expecting the virtuosity these two groups 
are known for. They got what they 
expected. 

The ballet was technical perfection. As 
my area of knowledge is dance, I cannot 
speak as authoritatively on the opera, but 
my conjecture is that it too, was flawless. 

There was little dramatic content in 
Wednesday night's five ballet showings. 
None was expected , however, as the 
Russian school of dance is based on 
technical proficiency — form over content. 

For those who like to keep score, two 32 
fouettes on point were performed, once by 
Valentina Kozlova in the finale Grand Pas 
de Deux, and once by Irina Tiatkina . 
Tiatkina had a slight, if not more difficult, 
variation in her fouettes, the whip-around- 
the-leg turn which, for decades, has been 
the measuring stick for ballerinas. 

Thm was much rhetoric at the opening 



of the show, by a Russian official speaking 
through an interpreter. He said the 
performance was offered in the name of 

peace and cultural enrichment, peace and 
understanding, peace and frienddiip. 
Okay, We get the pidture. 
" Oaoe die formafities were over^ the shorn 
settled down into a pattern of dance, then 
song, alternating two sopranos, two 
basses, and four sets oi dancers. 

Russians take their dance very seriously. 
Whereas a bit of humor showed up in the 
singing (**No, I Do Not Love Yon'* and 
••The Rea"), there was no light-hearted- 
ness in the ballet offerings. In contrast, at 
least one comedy, or "fun" piece can be 
found in the concerts of most American 
companies. 

Perhaps the most valid criticism of the 
dance was that there was too little of it. 
Many viewers left hungry for more Russian 
ballet. The opera, however, was served up 
generously. 

This was the second stop for the Russian 
troupe in their two-week tour of the U.S. 
They are playing mostly to college 
audiences, and plan to hit Chicago, New 
York and Pittsburgh before returning 
home. 

Regarding home, a spokeswoman for the 
artists said that their reception here has 
been every bit as warm as if they were in 
their own country. 



Greek author reveals the 
state of his country ^s art 



by ken lewandoski 

arts/ features editor 
Vassilis Vassilikos, author of Z and 
renown Greek short-story writer, was at 
FSU to speak on current themes in modem 
Greek literature. 

Nearly 25 people came to hear the author 
cite the confusion of this country's social 
structure in the last 65 years as the largest 
detriment to Greek writers. 

**The history of Greece is a long-playing 
lecord.'' VassUikos said. *^ln 1831 die 
oountiy was divided into three groups of 
peoplCi the pro-czarists (Russians), the 
pto-French, and the pro-English. Today 
die oovairy is divided into the same three 
groups: the pro-Russians, or communists; 
the pro-French, or those who favor die 
Common Mafket; and the pio-Eagiis, 
>Rrhich these days equals America." 

*The prablein of Greek idciitily is dM 

me ptiMem,*' thf^ asdiof ai^. 
Greece, he maintained, is on\f 
beginning to be Greek at the oote, and the 
tack of aa ind^eiioiis cultural force Idt the 
cooirtiy with artists who lived near its 



borders and were heavily influenced by 
neighbors and those who found isolation on 
the outer islands or in Asia Minor. 

Another major stumbling block in the 
progress of modem Greek Literature, 
Vassilikos said, was the language itself. 
Greek has had the dubious honor to have 
been accepted in five versions. 

Even in 1964, **the market songs Were 
written in one language, and all the books 
were written in another,** Vassilikos 
commented. The effect of the distinction 
caused what die andior called national 
schizophrenia , and said that die real 
problem, for writers "was not what to say, 
but how to say it,** a problem a good 4k»l 
more involved by the language situation 
than matters of style of the use of dialect. 

The language law was changed in 1976 
and there is only one official venioB of 
Gcedi now. Gve^ i de nti t y is evoiylBg mone 
^akkly diese d»ys, Vassilikos has a new 
novid, witii an VBttaasiatalile tide, yet to 
oe tranwaieo. 

The anther's vliit was spoBsored by the 
Bi&igual Education Progr a m. 




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I 



THERE'S A PLACE FOR 
ATHLETE'S FEETIt! 




...and that place is Buddy^s 
Goods. Both locaiions haiw co miiletel i ii ee 
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Nace,Conv8fee, and SpotfoPt are only a 
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AT WEEK S END Ffklay. OocMtarii WS / « 



iTie Salvation Army will 
help thousands this Xmas 



by km towtidotk i 



(^dnstmas it iBgh pobit of tlie 
Salvatioo Army year, accordiBg to Ll. Aflca 
52tteriee* tad ttuB year Iw eipecis hit 
group wffl fcadi 10,000 p a o^te m Itiit area. 

The Salvatioii Amy iCBc h c-t ttdbt immI 
number of people t liW Mi g ii ft liwi b cr of 
projects, six to be tiact. 

The most expentive project is the 
purchase and dittrSNitioii of Christmas 
baskets to families in the area. The baskets 
contain a tukey, some canned goods, and 
all those things you'd expect for a 
traditional Christmas dinner. Satterlee 
predicted that more than 300 such basinets 
will be delivered this Christmas. 

The most widespread program of the 
Salvation Army is the giving of gifts to 
more than 5,000 residents of nursing 
home, hospitals, the Chatahochee mental 
health facility, and the Federal 
Correctional histitution. 

The Salvation Army also sends gifts to 
the children of consenting inmates at the 
Federal Correctional Institute, oftentimes 
as hff at South America and Puerto Rico. 

A special effort is also made to acqure 
toys that are suitable for the diildren of 
SualaBd, aad tins year tbe Salvation Army 
has expnded its Christmas efforts isto two 




Oneof file Mw prajMs Is uporkiag m the 
cooperatiim mdi tte Toys for ToU 
campaign to issore that evetf d^d wffil 
fcc^ve QttiatuMut toyt. 

The oiMT new project is the Salvatioa 
Army Christmas Dmner. Satterlee said 
that most people just won't cook a large 
meal for themselves on Christmas,, and 
that many senior citizens and students, 
especially foreign students who can't 
return home for the holidays, too often 
spend a loney Christmas. And the 
Salavation Army believes neither in doing 
without or being lonely . 

Satterlee commented the collections 
which pay for all of this goodwill are down 
just a little at present, but he hopes that as 
the season progresses that incoming 
monies will pick up. 

When asked about the recent thefts, and 



Theodore Imhoff 

... coftecttng to help others 

m one case a burning of the traditional 
pots, S^terlee shrugged. '^There's reaUy 
no way to secure the pots. If someone 
wants it bad enough there's no way to stop 
fliem. Most of the thne we find out that 
those who steal from us are those we've 
helped m the past . What a way to say thank 
you." 

Concemmg all of these efforts to help 
those who need it. Satterlee was quick to 
pomt out that. **We^re not on an ego trip 
here; we don't need to have red shields 
(Ae Sahration Army symbol) plastered aQ 
over gifts. This may be the only gift some 
of these people receive and to remmd them 
that it is charity can be a humiliation." 
That isn't the sphit of Christmas. 

And who should know moffe about 
Christmas spuit than those who fca<A 
nearly as many people m real life as Santa 
Qaus does in m;rth. 




mtracHiliffiary 
fTWfi hav© rarnod 
th« world s most 

fMnMlifikiiM 

award 



An exclusive broadcast 

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, ON MOST 

PUBUG TELEVISION STATIONS 



Made possibfte by a grant from 



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December 8, 1978 AT WEEK'S BID 




|yy roiwkl liHNie 



special events 

« be Wfylmg Bvfrito BmdMra, regroaped 

after four years of non-existence, will 
perform their country-fried brand of 
smooth-riding rock Saturday night at 8 in 
R'!t)y Diamond Auditorium. Local favorites 
Suggs and Nichols open the show, which is 
free to FSU students. Tickets are available 
in Room 238 Union with two tickets per 
l.D. 

Classical guitarist Robert Guthrie will 
play tonight at 8:15 at St. John's Episcopal 
Church, 212 N. Calhoun St. A student of 
Andres Segovia, Guthrie is considered one 
of the world's top five classical guitarists. 
Admission to the show is $5 for the geoeral 
public and S3 for students. 

Renowned cbwsical performer Ravi 
Shankar will appear at 8:15 Saturday night 
in Opperman Music Hall to open the 
popular music series. Shankar is credited 
with heavily influencing many mainslman 
rock musicians, including the Beatles and 
lolm . McLaughlm. TIdLets to tiie ^ar 
player's performance are $3 for students 
and $5 for tiie geaeral pubKc. Shankar will 
idso give a lecture and demonstratioo st 
noon Saturday in the music haU. Admission 
to that is $2. 

Mnhwhige Theito's prodnctkNi of Noel 
Coward's "Bl^ Spirit" continues ^is 
weekend with shows' tonight and Saturday 
night beginning at 8:15. Admission is $3 
for students and $3.50 for the general 
public. For more information or 
reservations call the Theater Box Office at 
644-6500. 

Studio Theater is also busy this weekend 

with their production of Michael Grazzo's 
Broadway hit "A Hatful of Rain." 

The show is playing at the Conradi 
Theater tonight and Saturday night at 8:15. 
Tickets are free for students and $1.50 for 
the general public. 

A free performance by the FSU Dance 
Touring Theater will be given tonight and 
Saturday at 7:15 p.m. in Montgomery 
Gym. 

The Florida Fine Arts Councfl is 
conducting a free grants workshop this 
morning to discuss grant i^fdication 
procedures. The workshop will continue 
kito the afternoon and emuiig to help 
assess the policies and programs of the 
counc3. For further information, call tlie 
TallahasMe Arts Council at 222-9445. 

np^flArii-Md^iU^AoiB SBdi ef 4id(|||||hHil- 
AmericAo and European prints win 
continiie today at the FSU Fine Arts 
Snildmg. The collection of original 
etchings, woodcuts, lithogmphs and 
sengnipi»» bkiiioii^ woeks oy uaiuner, 
Picasso, ChagaU mhA Whisller, Is beli^ 
prcjcOMi by Maison Graphics, Inc., of 
Baltinoie, Md. The tsAM^ muA aide will 
ht opes fpam 10 a.ra. to 5 p.m. 

LdlfflgM Aft PasBdatfai 
free pareat-child workshop tomorrow from 
10 a.Bi. to 1 |l.Bi. Hie workshop will be led 




by Cecilia Cunningham and will focus on 
"Creating Wild and Fanctfiil Things with 
Paper. 

The Seven Hills HeaUng Arts Center 
will hold a Christmas Tea and general 
meeting Sonday at 7 p.m. at the Taproot, 
631 W. Tennessee. 

9-129 bivHed to a 
Christmas film showing at the Leon County 
Pirirfic taOTtty tom o rro w from 2-1:30 p.m. 
Two films will be shown. 

mMisic 

If the Burritos, Ravi Shankar or other 

stellar musical events aren't enough to 
satisfy your uncontrollable urges for vibes, 
strings, amps and chords. Tally's local club 
scene should quell your lust for sound. 

Appearing at Tommy tonight and 
Saturday will be Lynn Magin and 
Midnight, with the great sound of swamp 
jazz. 

Tom Brown and Co. will exorcise finals 
demons all night long at the Pastime 
Bottle Club down the street. 

Bluegrass will be the order at the Sub 
and Pub downtown where the Pickin' 
Parlor will pick and grin tonight and 
Saturday. 

Aim downtawB me Lohman and Mello, 

whose just completed soundtrack for the 
film, Shell Ladies** is fast advancing on 
local charts. They*ll be at the Alley tonight ' 
and Saturday night. 

RIcco's Louqie wID onee agidn be filed 
with the jazz of the Sound Affair, with 
Lindsay Sargeant on the ivories and Jim 
Crozier on bass tonight and Saturday. 

And, if you want to get a preview of tbe 
Burritos opening act, check out the 
Downunder Coffeehouse tonight at 9 or 11, 
where Suggs and Nichols will be pickin* 
guitars and singing the workday blues. 
Admission is free for students. 
(Unfortunately the beer isn't). 



films 



Moore Auditorium: Tonight — The 
Goodbye Girl $1.50, 7:30, 9:30 and 11:30; 
Saturday, Lies My Father Told Me, 7:30. 
9:30. 

Florida: $.99. Take All of Me. 7:30. 9:30. 
Northwood MaU: Gain South, 7:30, 
9:30. 

Tallahassee Mall Cinema I: Who is 
Killing the Great Ch^s of Europe, 7:20, 

9:40. 

Cinema D: Up in Smoke, 8:00, 9:50. 

Miracle Triple: Foul Play, 7:35, 9:50; A 
Wedding, 7:15, 9:35; Cohms « Honmmm, 
7:20, 9:35. 

Varsity Triple: 2069: A Sex Odyssey and 
Fless Gordon, 7:15, 8:35, 10:15; Monty 
Python MeeU Beyond the Fringe, 7:20, 
9:15; An Unmarried Womtm, 7:20, 9:10. 

Ci^ital Drive-In: Convention GMm aad 
iMmf«ttierat7:30. 

CapM GamasiAmimalHouae, 7, 9:30; 
Burys from BrmU, 7, 9:30; Heaven Cm 
Wmk, 7:25, 9-JS; The Waddett W^gom 
TmimimtkeWett,7:m,9'M. 



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AT WEEK'S ENO Frktev. OacamlMr 8. 1978 / 11 



tmit is finally over for film students 



liy rafpiMlcl fvynoklt 



h has been sMd tlwt aaydiiag woitliwlule is 

for. ' 

For studcBti flUMtiag III fiha o t nu^oring k mass 
communicatkm tlii« dicfce mgr putmm to he tmc in the case 
f Film 3503 The Coolniiponry Oiieiiia: Theory and 
Practice, a five credit Iwiir oovrae wfiidi wll be offered 
winter quarter at FSU thanks to the last minute efforts of the 
a)llege of communication to obtain the necessary funds. 

The course, which meets the humanities requirement for 
liberal studies, will be taught by Dr. Donald Ungurait, a 
communications professor at FSU. According to Ungurait 
the course will examine the impact and role of directors on 
film. The course will examine the filnis of Stanley Kiibhck, 
Alfred Hitchcock and Orson Welles. 

These three artists have had a tremendous influence on 
the current crop of filmakers. All three men ne still at work 
contributing to film literature and their work may well be the 
best theatre of our time,'* Ungurait commented. 

Ungiirait, whoisconsideiedlobeasomewhat unorttiodcnE 
tadigr, ogiets students tiie —iqae oppottu n y^ to chose one 
of three contracts as to how tiiey will be graded. Depending 
(Ml whirt they consider t hc k bes t dcflls, students can diose to 
hive a major part ci tbck oouse grade conie from either a 
comprehensive final exam, two researdi papers, or a 
ooflihination of discussion assignments and multiple exams. 

Ungurait ^plains Ins dioioe oC Kubrick, HitchcodL and 
Welles in this way: 

' 'The real thrust of the class is to try to develop some idea 
of the form and content of these three directors. These three 



a significant impact of the world's film literature. All 
tlwec have worked under the European and American 
motion picture industries. * 
"Among the major contributions of Welles has been the 
revolutionizing of the sound film. Film critics seem to agree 
that Citizen Kane may be the greatest black and white film 
ever made and that A Touch of Evil may be the best "B" 
movie to emerge from Hollywood. Those two films plus the 
Magnificent Ambersons, The Strang^, Lady from 
Shanghai, and Chinm At Midmight will be aoceaad by the 
class. 

"Alfred Hitchcock is the acknowledged master of the 
suspense film. He has directed perhaps the greatest 
psychodramas in screen history. SpeUboimd, Notorau, 
North by Northwest, Psycho, and The Birds are sense o€ 1^ 
master works. In addition Family Plot, Strangers on a 
Train, The Man Who Kmew Tm Mmk Shadow of a Doubt 
wiU be screened io ptnwide an ovwiew of tids ^ 
work. 

''Perhaps no dkeclor of the sixties and seventies has 
electrified audiences more than Stanly KnMek. Geaies 
have Itttle rrievttce to KiMck. He seems Id be aMe to 
functioii in all of them with ease. 1%e KMig is a caper 
movie. Palis of Gfof3r and Hr. ^nmgdoveorHawllemmed 
to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb are black corned 
fotms. Sportwus, a film which Kubrick disowns, may well be 
the most interesting spectacle to eoMrge from Holljfwood. 
2P01, A Space Odyssey was ti^nkmg man's sdence fiction. 
A Clockwork Orange has changed from a work of horror to 
perhaps the greatest black comedy of the twentieth century. 
It revolts whfle it fascinates. And Barry Lindon, a 




Dr. Donmld Ungurmt 

. . . teaching a mass communications dass 
disappointment at die box office fenains tho nMOl 

a 0 • 

The daas wffl iMMe leOuies on 
Thursdays from 11:15 to 1:10 p.m. and fifan 



TVies^ nights at 7:30 at 
to the public and a 
series from the IPO for SS. 
obtained after pre-registtatiBn, itudcnta wliMng to 
in Fte 3503 wfll have to do ao hi into vegNnti 
drop/add. 




F 
R 
I 



W« TENN* 

Pastime Downstairs 

TOM BROWN 
&C0. 

12-SAJI. BYOB 



S 
A 

T 







s 

"ID RLBi' OAMOISD AjD 

FSU 

J!\ZZLABBW 

I Benlle/ SheUxmer, Condudor 

f 815-DEC 8, 1978 J 





ie / Friday, December 8, 1978 AT WEEK'S END 



Santa 



"And then the girl toys, the traditionals. 

There's a new doll baby out that drinks this fluid and gets 
diaper rash It breaks out in blue fUiid, aodyou add this other 
fluid and it goes away. 

"h's called Baby Rash, or Baby Gondo; I don't know what 
disease the child gets. They're asking for that a lot. and then 
there's the Dance- Around-a-Lot and the Barbie Fashion 
Head, which is a bust, larger than the regular Barbie dolls. 
And you apply flMke-up on h and do their hi^ — teach them 
their r(4es in Ufe. So that's whet the girls are asking for. 

**I tale pflde in bting a Santa. 1 waann be die best one in 
town, right? But the disadvantages of the job are the suit's 
hot, I have to be pleasant to the children when I'm really 
sweaty, and the oMMistache and beard is pinching me. 

' * A Uttie child comes up and she ' s all ready to have fan and 
I'm miserable. It's Wke saying 'Okay, I'm going to be 
pleasant now,' and that's hard. 

' 'And alsoyou have to omstantly watch what you're going 
to say, so 1 don't coss. 

'*Idi»i'tdrinkonthejobeither,btttwhenIgetoffImake up 
for all the lost hours. 

**I remember when I was a kid this Santa, whew, he stunk. 
And I go out of my way to make sure 1 don't stink, and that I 
don't have bad breath. 

"It's a whole image were creating here, you know? 

"I believe in God. and I was told there was a Santa Claus 
and I found out there wasn't. I was told there was an Easter 
Bunny and I found out there wasn't, and I was told that good 
people make it . but I found out a lot of bad people made it too 
— Richard Nixon. 

And then they say 'Do you believe in God?' Well, you 
know. . . I hate that kind of perpetuating the illusion. 

"That's the reason when a child starts asking I always tell 
them the truth. Because if you give them all these things and 
they find out they're all lies. . . 

"Just like you, you're gonna be college educated, you're 
gonna have this degree and you 're gonna have this great job . 
But just having a college education doesn't mean you're 
gonna get all the sweepstakes. 

"So I feel bad about lying especially to the pre-schoolers 
because they really buy it, and its kind of like you lose 
yourself in the lie. 

"Personally I'm more into the Christmas spirit, it's a big 
commercial endeavor, but I really get off on the Christnias 
carols. 1 like all that traditional stuff, the Currier and 
Ives-type of Christmas. 

**It's kind of wierd because my kids know I'm Santa, he's 
eight years old, Todd, and he still believes in Santa, and I'm 
one tk Santa's helpers, and so he on eggsteUs tiie 
minute I put on the suit. He's really a good kid from the day 
after Thanksgiving until Christmas. 

*'Ottt»de of being a Santa, I wouM 13ie to act, go into 
theatre, take more classes. I need more training but it's all a 
question of when I have money enough to goto school, but I'H 
pr«>bably be in theatre the rest of my life. 

"I'd 1^ to be a good cfamcter actor. 1 don't want to be 
famous, but. . . 

**Moctof my training has been out at TCC, with Dr. Jean 
English, and also the Tallahassee Little Theatre. I was 
involved with them for three or four yeaat.' 




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ikf lijes laden wiih Blue Maguey jnnas on their may to Cverw's La Hojena plant 



Since 1795 weVe slathered our 




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Blue 

the genue way. 

Its the old vmy. Aad still 
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At Cuervo loe know that there is aidy one way to make 
Cuervo Gold perfect The way we've been doing it for mare 
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That's why people still nurture our fields of Blu£ 
Mojguey plants. And why mvles are Bti^ 
these precious plants to our distillery. Fbr tradition is still 
the most important ingredient in Cuervo Gold. 

This is what nuikes Cvervo Gold truly special. Neat, 
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CuervOe The Gold Standard since 1795. 

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CUERVO ESPEOAL* TEQUILA 80 PROOF IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © 1978 HEUBlON. INC. M^TFORO. CONN. 





* • » 



I Wise. "Wc ask all people arrested on 
*fB chargw if they're addicted. Ooce 
ijhev sec that we're Imnuiii beings aad 
re concerned about tliCTi, they usuaUy 
cept treatment. We wont leave an adffict 
,s cell to go thioagfa withdrawal; he'll 
taken to the hosplul if necessary." 
Mthough Tallahassee Memorial Region- 
\ledical Center does not hmve a 
jt'toxification unit for treatiiig addicts, it 
,11 admit them if they're sent by the police 
someone in the rehabilitation field. The 
drug usually prescribed by doctors at the 
hospital to heroin addicts is methadone, 
according to Wise. There is no methadone 
maintenance program for addicts in this 
area. Treatment administered is up to the 
ndividual donor, and varies from addict to 
ddict. 

Wise maintains it is difficult for police to 
-iake arrests of heroin dealers. 

"Tallahassee is wide open for drug 
>muggling now," he says. **We do not 
lavc enough manpower to adequately deal 
^ ith the situation, and most of tiie public is 
cittctant to get involved with drug 
problems unless it directly effects their 
home." 

Users don't want to stop, and dealers 

ake too much money to find another line 

of business. The sheriffs department tries 

to deal with problems when they arise, 

concentrating on arrests of persons dealing 

n large quantities of drugs. 

"To coin a new phrase," says Wise, **we 

just piss on the hottest spot." 

« « • 

Carlos is flying high and feelin' good. 

"Man, you have no idea till you've done 
i! how fine smack is. It's like peace of 
mind, total body orgasm." 

Is it worth the risks of arrest and 
iddittion. hustling the streets every day 

r the monev to feed his habit? 

Yeah. sure. 1 got busted once and put 
n methadone. Now, that's shit. Coming 
iff methadone was worse than smack 
w ithdrawal. I just did my time, got back on 
the street and started running up again. I 
don't want to quit, it makes me feel too 
good. 1 know 1 could O.D. at something, 
but man, we all gonna* go sometime." At 
least I'll die a happy man." 

Apalachee Comniunity Mental Health 
Services and tiie Florida Drug Abuse 
Treatment and Bdttdition Association 
(DATE) recently sponsoced « workshop <m 
treatment alternatives for the drug 
offender^ its purpose being "to provide a 
forum from which the legal professi<m and 
treatment providers might con^der issoes 
related to inter-fadng the criminal justice 
and drug abuse treatment systems." 
Featured speakers ftw the workshop were 
Maurice Paul, circuit judge for the Ninth 
Judicial District, and Jerry Feulncr, 
president of DATE. 

Paul discussed a model release system in 
Orlando that offers alternatives to 
ineareeration for addicts. After arraign- 
ment, individuals released to the program 
are assigned a tracker. Since addicts are 
considered to be high risk/low motivation 
pcopW, program directors decided 
someone should know where the addict is 
at all times and guide the addict in 
directions counter to his or her lifestyle. An 
essential part of the program is moving the 
addict to a new location, and establishing 
him or her in a home and a job. Statistics 
'^how that the addict released in the same 
'^Id environment with no new system of 
support will most likely return to heroin. 

Judge Paul maintained that without 100 
percent fooperttioii br the courts. » 




I»ogram like the one in Orlando cannot 
succeed, and priswis. he said, are not for 
drug addicts. 

•*I4ofcH beheve jail is rehabilitative." 
Paid Mi never sentence people to jail 
to help them. I send them onlv to 
wmhoose them, to punish them. I believe 
everyone deserves a chance to help himself 
and change his lifestyle." 

No such program exists in Leon County, 
and most judges here are severe in 
sentencing drug users, perhaps declining 
to share Paul's sentiment that "the addict 
is a wasted human being who has thrown 
away his life. He deserves a last rhance." 

DATE President Feulner cited a 1966 
study of 10,000 prison inmates nationally: 
61 percent admitted they had drug or 
alcohol problems. Of the prisoners in 
. Florida institutions, 60 percem have 
- similar problems. In Escambia County. 
43 percent of the people arrested are 
charged with drug related offenses, 
according to Feulper. exclusive of alcohol. 

''Treatment makes sense as an 
alternative to incarceration on a dollar and 
cents basis," Fuelner said. It costs about 
$7,000 a year to keep a prisoner in a Florida 
jail, whereas treatment for the same 
person in a rehabilitation facility costs 
$5,500 a year, he added. 

Traditionally, the criminal justice system 
and treatment workers have not cooperated 
with one another, according to Fuelner. 
Judges are skeptical of the reliability of 
treatment programs he said, and bo^ 
speakers at the conference stressed the 
need to educate the judiciary on the 
benefits of releasing addicts to treatment 
programs instead of jailing them. 

Disc Village, located on Natural Bridge 
Road in Woodville, just south of 
Tallahassee, is the only residential 
treatment center tor addicts in this area. 
Center director Tom 01k says many more 
poly-drug abusers (ups. downs, alcohol) 
than heroin addicts seek treatment at the 
facility. 

01k claims the program's graduates have 
an 85 percent success rate, though about 
30 percent of the people who get in leave 
during the first week or two in the 
demanding program. 

"Some people would rather go to jail 
than change their ways," says 01k. "We 
try not to accept those who won't benefit." 

The goal of Disc Village is to see that the 
previous drug abuser leaves the program 
with an education and a marketable skill. 
Disc attempts to be as comprehensive and 
individualized as possible, according to 
Oik. The presidents have built one 
greenhouse and are in the process of 
building andther, and they also grow much 
of their own food, and raise some livestock. 

Last year a program was begun for 
parents with small children whereby the 
children are allowed to live at Disc with the 
parent. For some, says 01k. ' the 
rehabUitation pfpcess is not completed 
untU they learn to care for their children." 

Oik says a program simflar to the 
Orlando one is badly needed in 
Tallahassee, where currently the only 
viable alternatives to incarceration are Disc 
Village and tfie outpatient program run by 
Apalachee Mental Health Services. 

Ahmed Abdul Ali worths in the drug uak 
of the office of special services at 
Apalachee. If an individual comes in for 
treatment of a dnig addiction, he or she 
will be referred to a physkian for diagnose 
and if necessary, according to Afi. 
hospitalized for detoxffication. I>«ri«»«^ 
detox process, which lasts fer two or three 
davs the patient is counseled continuous- 
After that the individual receives 



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18 / Friday Decembers, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 

Yearbook photographer 
travels world on wheels 



by susan waller 

flsmteau writer 

Photographer Don Morton does a lot 
more with his time than taking pictures of 
smiling soon-to-be college graduates — he 
pedals around the world on a bicycle. 

Morton, who is working for Image Works 
Studios in San Francisco, is in Tallahassee 
to take senior pictures for tiie newly 
revived FSU yearbook. He has some 
tetcrestii^ stories td leO about the Hfe and 
tnwt^ot a iredbMot pholo-lniBnafiit. 

"Plwlographing hnn^wds ci seniors 
daily becomes routine and unlmaghia- 
tive/' Morton says. The foces he has shot 
have become -blurred hito one yearbook 
picture: in his words, **each picture is the 
same as the next." 

Morton finds subtle differences in every 
college he has visited. 

"Characteristic of FSU is all the 
bureaucratic red-tape, Morton says. "I 
have been amazed by all the permits the 
authorities at FSU require: parking 
permits, loading permits, unloading 
permits, and permits to have peaceful 
assemblies. All other schools don't require 
so much legal hassle." 

In addition to being a professional 
photographer, Morton has a bachelor's 
degree in journalism from San Jose State 
University. He also spent four years inthe 
Air Force. 

Morton leads the life of a wanderer. He 
makes his home in a luxury motor home, 
what he calls a very good alternative to 
living out €i a suitcase in hotels. living on 
the FSU circus grounds while in 
Tallahassee he has his mobite home 
hooked up to FSU power. He descrRies 
molnle home Me as the best way to travel 
from job to job. 

Morton is ddngfthe portrait woit to earn 
money for a world bicyde'tour in June. He 
plans to begin pedaling at the Golden Gate 
Bridge in San Francisco and finish there 
two years later. 

K^rton plans to include almost every 
country in the world in his trip, and 
particularly wants to go through Tehran, 
Iran, provided the situation is such that 
Americans will still be allowed entry. 

"The 1980 Moscow Olympics is on my 
itinerary, and I am looking forward to 
visiting the Soviet Union. I am currently 
in the process of a(»plying for entrance into 
China." 




Don Morton P»w»brrob«to1wy 



'Since I cannot pedal across oceans, I 
plan to hitch a ride on lumber ships and 
freighters," he adds. 

Morton is already a pro at bike-touring, 
having recently returned form a 14-month 
journey through Europe. He and a 
companion covered 9,000 miles and 11 
countries "getting to know the real people 
of Europe." He is a strong advocate of 
bike-touring because it is "inexpensive, 
leisurely, and far more educational than a 
standard guided tour." 

Morton encourages people to give 
bike -touring a try. 

"Often people find that they don't have 
to be atheletes to enjoy bike riding," he 
says. * 'Cycling makes you far more likable 
to peo^e of other countries, who are 
anxious to inquire about your trip, offer 
advice and hospitality." 

''Americans are very ^ell-liked and 
imitated tiiroughout Europe, and those 
people ccmiplaining about the anti- Ameri- 
can feelings were those who took the 
standard European tours and didn't really 
get to know Europe. 

Moreton has compiled ihe photos that he 
took in Europe into a multi-media slide 
show which will be shown at FSU in 
January. 

He will offer tips to the novice cyclist 
who plans to tour abroad, speaking on such 
topics as life in a tent, equipment, youth 
hostels, meals and diet, amusement, 
safety, finance, repairs and security. 

Moreton also does free-lance journalism 
for Bicyling magazine, a national 
publication. While on his world-wide tour 
he is hoping to do a syndicated column for 
U.S. newspapers on solo bike-tripping. 



Heroin page 17 

out-patient care in the form of individual 
counseling, group therapy and, some- 
times, methadone. The success rate for 
addicts treated on an out-patient basis is 
much lower than that for residential 
treatment centers. 

Jim White, a former circuit court 
prosecutor who now teaches at FSU's 
School of Criminology, has looked long and 
hard at the attitudes of many in the 
criminal justice system towards addicts. 

"The criminal justice system is still 
classical in terms of seniencing; it believes 
people should be punished for their 
crimes," says White. 

Courts do not look favorably on treating 
^cklicts arrested for sale or possession 
drugs. White says, because judgeis believe 
them guilty of a moral crime which 
deserves punishment. Treatment pro- 
grams are viewed with suspicion by 
judges, who oftentimes think they are 



manipulated by offenders to escape 
punishment, he adds. 

"In Leon County, if you have long hair, 
use drugs or are black you'll go to 
Raiford." sl s one rehabilitation worker, 
who prefers to remain anonymous. "Drug 
use is looked at very dimly. If you get 
arrested for any type of possession, you'll 
go to jail." * :k * 

Carlos is slumped against the wall, eyes 
closed, mumbling. 

"You know, 1 been through a lot of shit. 
We all have, my buddies here and me. We 
started running up smack when we were in 
Vietnam. It was all right; made you forget 
you could get your ass sh(^ off anytime. 
Then we come back here, more shiti can't 
find a job, my old lady left me. 

"1 ain*t making no excuses or nothing. 
It's just like. I got my life, let me live it. I 
ain't hurting nobody by running up smack., 
i got the cure for anvthing here. You hurt 
sometime lady, come see me. I fix you up 
good." ^ * 




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Fresh off oi 
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Maul's swimmers meet UT 

in FSU ^^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^i^^^l^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ pool Satm^day 



by gwM enstoy 

HMnbMv sports wrtlsr 

Fresh off one of its most impressive 
performances of the year, the FSU 
women's swim team takes on Tennessee 
tomorrow at 1 p.m. at the University 
Aquatics Center (aka the Union Pool). 

Last weekend in Lincoln, Neb., the Lady 
"Seminoles captured the prestigious Lady 
Husker Invitational, with victories over last 
year's Big Ten conference runner-up 
Wisconsin and three-time Big Eight 
champion Kansas. 

According to FSU coach Terry Maul, the 
key to Seminole fortunes on Saturday, as it 
has been throughout the brief season, is 
the Seminoles' depth. Predicting this will 
be the closest meet all year, Maul- said 
placement will determine the outcome. 
Loaded with talent in all events, FSU has 
nin its dual meet record to 4-1, mostiy on 



the basis of dcnntnatloa of the 2-3-4 
positions in races. 

Tennessee, though finishing 27th in the 
nation last year to FSU*s 23rd, brin^ a 
skilled team to Tallahassee. Two 
swimmers in particular, Sandy Ferrin (200 
and 500 yard freestyle) aiid Jil Fletcher (50 
and 100 yard backstroke) have swam times 
this year that are faster than the FSU 
records in their events. 

Individuals to watch for FSU include the 
Miller sisters. Kathi and Jerri, and Lisa 
Nencioni. Nencioni swam three personal 
bests last week in Nebraska (in the 100 and 
200 breaststroke and the 400 individual 
medley) with only three days rest. 
According to Maul, eight to twelve days is 
normally required to attain that sort of 
performance. Kathi Miller also turned in a 

nm to WOMEN'S SWIMMING, 

20 



[Seminoles renew UF 
.series Saturday after 
ten year lay off 

from staff reports 

FSU's basketball game against Florida Saturday (8 
P m.) in Jadcsonville marks a new era in the Seminole- 
I Gator rivalry. The two teams will be playing for the first 
time since 1%7. and the move was initiated jHimarily by 
I first ycar FSU coach Joe Williams. ^ - ^ 

Upon his arrival at FSU, Williams expressed « desire to 
•ncrease statewide interest in the program by resuming as ^ 
niany state rivalries as possible, with the Florida rivalry at ^ 
the top of his list. ^ 
In 1%7. Florida coach Tommy Bartlett discontinued the | 
series, reasoning that the Gators needed to ^^^^^ i 
more on their Southeastern /Conference schedoK. 
Coincidentally or not, Hugh Durham had just begun to 
break a southern college tradition by recruiting black 

mm m BASKETBALL, 




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' Friday Decembers, 1978 FLORIDA AMor/^y 



Basketball 



pltyers. and his 67 team nclmled four bMi plajrers in the 
startiiig Miie-ttp. 

The game should be an even matcb^ hetmern two 
young and ivexpcrieiioed basketball teams. 

The Gators could start as many as three first year 
players bichidaig 6-S cent^ Maurice McDaniel. 6-5 guard 
Mike Milhgan and possibly 6-6 guard John Corso. 

However. Florida may have the services of sophomore 
center leggle Haonah. who has been oe a three-game 
suspension for unspecified ^sctpfiaary reasons.* 

With or without Hannah, tiie Gators wSl have a decided 
height advantage over the Semtnoles. which will be 
something the small but quick FSU teun will face 
throu^KNit the season. 

The 3-0 Seminoles fared well against Auburn when 6-9 
Murray Brown took the situation in his own hands and 
poured in 42 points for his career high. FSU will need a 
similar effort from Brown plus rebounding help from 
forwards Ed Chatman, Hank Mann and reserve James 
Bozeman to beat the Gators. 

The game will be televised from the Jacksonville 
Coliseum through a statewide six-station network 
including WCTV in Tallahassee. WCJB in Gainesville, 
WESH in Orlando, WTOG in lampa-St. Petersburg, and 
WEAR in Pensacola. V 

Women's swiinming 

from |Mi00 IS 

great performance on three days rest, with her best effort 
of the season in the 200 freestyle. 

**This shows that the girls are taking care of 
themselves," said Maul. "And that is very encouraging, 
since we don't have a training table, or the personnel to 
run bed checks, or anything like that to insure they stay in 
shape." 

After final exams next week, the women swimmers will 
regroup down in Ft. Pierce to train for a week at Indian 
River Community College. Prior to returning to FSU for 
winter qu^irter, the Seminoles will swim against Michigan 
State as it winds up its training period in Ft. Lauderdale. 

Convinced that the meet will be so close as to hinge on 
the final event. Maul hopes for a lax|^croWd of FSU 
supporters Saturday. 

"A big and enthusiastic crowd may be all we need to 
push us to victory," Maul said. 



Sports In Brief — 

The FSU Sailing Club will hold an informal meeting 

Saturday at 0:30 p.m. at the Reservation. BYOB. 

* * ♦ 

The Inter-Varsity meeting scheduled for today will be 

held at 7 p.m.. not at 7:30. 

* * ♦ 

Those wishing to attend an occilation workshop this 
weekend should contact Bonny Profano. Please bring 
your own yo-yo. 




A HATFUL 
OFRAin 



By mjcfiaeb sazzo 




1 



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{attler forward wall 




FLORIDA FLAMBEAU Fndav. December 8 1978 / 21 



wiU get t^ted against Jackson St Satunkiy 



attlers begin play-offs 
dth Jackson St. Saturday 



,l^y Sidney bedingfield 

flambeau sports editor 

Florida A&M's Rattler football team 
begins a journey tomorrow that could lead 
!o a national champioiiship and a natkmaUy 
i devised football game. 

The Rattlers face Jackson State (10-1) 
Saturday at 1:40 p.m. aad the game will be 
televised in Tallahassee on WECA-TV. 

Jackson State, which plays in the 
Southwestern Athletic Conference, record- 
ed its only loss of the season against 
Grarabling, a team FAMU 'soundly 
defeated m the Orange Btossom Classic 
Saturday night. But FAMU coadi Rudy 
Habbard dinnisses this as any indication 
about the outcome of Saturday's game. 

They did lose to Grambfing but they 
beat Tennessee State,** Hubbard said, 
and Tennessee beat us.** 



Jackson State features a wishbone 
offense, and that has FAMU defensive 
coordinator Fred Goldsmith worried. 

*'It will be the first time we have faced a 
wishbone offense this season," Goldsmith 
said. "They execute it very well and have 
an extremely quick quarterback." 

Jackson State also has two running backs 
who have gained over 1,000 yards this 
season, and both are very fast, according to 
Goldsmith. 

If the Rattlers prevail Saturday they will 
advance to the division 1-AA champion- 
ship game. That game will be televised 
nationally, which would supply FAMU with 
one of its biggest paydays in history. 

The winner of the FAMU Jackson State 
game will j^y the winner of University of 
Nevada-Reno-University of Massachuse^ 
game in the championship game. 



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Buasdiar Coronet excellent cond 
NegoHabie, call after 5, 576-4414 

FOR SALE: REFRIGERATOR 2 CU 

FT. Warranty. Prioa n apa Wih I s. CaH 

2a4H4<07. 

10 SPEED BIKE. NOT OPERABLE 
FIRST OFFER REMOTELY RE- 
SEMBLING REASONABLE RE- 
COMPENSE TAKES IT. 575-3501 



SATURDAY NITE IS THE LAST 
NIGHT OF THE AUCTION SO CALL 
M4-4M0 lb MAKE YOU BID! . . . . 




Leaving town soon-must sell 1972 
Vega GT Liftt>ack. Nice little car in 
decent running cond. First reasonable 
offer accepted. 575-4977 betw. 5-7PM 



LOOKING FOR A USED CAR? 

Se*» >he folks at 
USED CAR SUPERAAARKET 
2525 W. 




HONDA 500F 1972 YosiNnura 

Kerker headers, K&Ns, Lockhart OR 
Cooler 8. Thermostat, Lester AAags, 
Continental tires, luggage rack. 



HONDA CLISS STREET BIKE VfRY 
CLEAN NEEDS MHHOR WORK tISi 

CALL 224 8863 




Roommata wiNW to share 3 

bedroom house 85 monthly call 
306 0906 near Albertson's on Oellwood 
Dr - 

SUBLET 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED 
APT. IN PLAZA START WINTER 
QUARTER CALL 222-2752 

SUBLET ROOM CASH HALL 
SINGLE OR DOUBLE, MAID, FOOD 
WINTER CALL 222-9220 DEP. INCL. 

2 BEDROOM APT. ACROSS FROM 
CAMPUS. Rent $165 per month plus 
utilities call Janie 2243040 

SUBLET 1BDRM APT. 170+Utl. 
ACROSS FROM FSU 4 Seasons CALL 
ANYTIME 222-4153 

COMPLETELY FURNISHED 
HOUSE 2 BR, 2 STUDIES (or 3BR, 1 
STUDY) FENCED YARD, NEAR 
MALLS, $2S0-mo., 385 9245 



Sublet apt for winter qh- only. S70 
jnan. CaH for mere info. 222-0520 



1 8i 2 BR house and apts 702-708 W. St. 
Augustine St. two bl<s south FSU ask 
tenants or call Gage 3864014 $125to$150 

SUBLET OSCEOLA HALL POOL 
SAUNA MAID MEALS WILL PAY $25 
CALL 40SE 224^7514 

Sublease 1 br. apt. at Plaza, $160 a 
month. Furniture for sale, real 
bargin. Call Maggie 222-1308 

Luxury 1 bdrm. unfurn. located at 114 
Chapel Dr. Ground floor apt. Rent 
incl. Cable TV 8i gart>age pickup $167 
per mo. Res. fAgr. 575-2711 

MALE OCCUPANTS ONLY $240 PER 
QUARTER NO UTIL. 
PHONE 599-9006 AVAIL. JAN 1 

Rma.. a vailable in sorority bousa for 
winior-spring Quarters. * 

for info, call Betsy 224-9792 

looking to upgrade your living condi- 
tioris? Hare's your chance. Quaint i 
badroam apt on Collage Ave. S125- 
monlb CiH Gardon-212-«7l7 after 0 

Country Living: Furn 2 BR house on 
farm. Lg rooms Garden planted quiet 
people only. Avail Jan — June 79. 
SWOino^ Call 870-2994 Soon! 

Sublet 1 Bdrm Furn apt. Cable, pool, 
laundry. Across from law school $175 
mo. Dec. 15 or Jan. 1st Call 222 9344 

Nice one bedroom apartment for rent. 

Near campus, 135 per month. Call 
2227523 or come by 529 W. College. 



VW bus for sale. 1966 
rebuilt 69 motor, runs 

224 7745 



3t»rT^ Very ckse to FSU, furn. 1 bdr. apt. in 
good, S)0 faS^- t*jg^batt»> ^JJJ^ 



672 dr Coup deviHe Cadillac 
excellent cond orig mile SHIO €W 
after 5:oop.m. 575-5051 

1978 Camaro 2-20 Mack-tan interior 
4apead SSfr^^arrol P.S. P.B. tilt 

steering AMFM stereo cassette new 
tires $6875.00 Firm Call Monica 
574^59 

n TR6 GOOD CONDITION, 
ONE OWNER, LOW MIUEAGE 
078-6737 



prefer grad. student or couple, 
children or pets. 8110 mo. 386-7998 



Sublease spacious 2txlr furnished 
townhouse, 2t>aths, central heat&air, 
FSU* TCC, Westwood Shopping 
Available Jan. i. sa6-7a« ' 



NEED A PLACE TO STAY OVER 
CHRISTMAS? CALL NANCY IM-lfitt 
DAYS OR 878-7012 

I BORM FURN-UNFURN DUPLEX 
EZ walk to FSU beg. 12-15-1-1 $140 
L Cab r t I ities. 222-1823 



A fine motor 



71 VW RUNS GOOD. NEEDS 
BODY WORK. BEST OFFER. 
CALL 878 7534 EVES. 



69 VW AUTOMATIC, RECENT 
TIRES AND BATTERY, AM-FM 
ISO. Sm CALL 



SUBLET 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED 
APT. ,IN PENSACOLA ARMS 
JAN-JUNE CALL 575-5033 8225 

HELP! Sublet my gigantic 1 br. apt. 
Take over lease now until June. Gold 
carpet, dishwasher, disposal, central 
air-lieat. Pool, sauna Ok laundry room. 
WtoHiing distance to FSU. Utils. 
average $20. Unfurnished Call 
576-7635 or 644-4075 Gregg 



19n PINTO RUNABOUT 

Will cdrry you anywttere 
Good cond., AC, luggage rack 



turn, studio apt. $135. month 
includes cable and gart}age collection. 
Dunwoody Apartments, 405 Dun- 
woody St. Res. manager 222-41051. or 
305-9912. Sorry, no pels. 



Two bdr house near FSU, unfurnished 
kitchen equipped air, fenced yard pals 
ok. $225. mo. 1-997-1015. MontieoNo. 
evenings. 

Sublet lg 1 bdrm apt $160 mo. Start 
mid Dec. Keep my $100 deposit. Pool 

?. v.nd'-, 1 block fr FSU 224-'''27 

Takeover contract at Osceola Hall all 
meals maid service pool sauna TV for 
more info call Wendy 2343215 

S»^£T HAJ.E WIAMEA 2 BDRM 
IN FRONT OF POOL, CLOSE TO 
PUBLIX CALL SM-lliO 

SUBLET 1 BEDROOM FURN APT. 

$160 MON FOUR SEASONS CABLE 
TV POOL SAUNA LAUNDRY ROOM 
WALK TO FSU CALL 224 5662 

FROM 000 MO. INCL. UTILITIES 
Beautiful 8i charming furnished 
rooms, central heat 8i air. Ideal for 
students, only 1 bik. from FSU. All 
completely renovated it now ready for 
occupancy. Furnished apts. incl utii. 
also available. See at HEARTH- 
STONE 415 W. College Ave. THE OAK 
109 W. College Ave. 

Responsible female roommate 

needed to share 2br unfurnished apt 
w-same at Mission Ridge Apts. $50. 
deposit, $125. per month which 
includes utilities. Come by Apt 146 or 
cat! 878-5026. Also roonrmiate needed 
for 2 br trailer in quiet neighborhood 
near Tallahassee sports arena $50 
deposit $90 per month which includes 
utilities. Call 878-5026 

Large 1 bdrm. furn. 3 biks. from FSU 
$155 incl. cable TV and garbage 
collection. Sorry nopets. Calf rasidant 
mgr. 222-4505 _^ 

Large apt for rent(sublet)start w Jan 
school term $150 includes part, 
utilities. 576-6479.Ken Keep h-yingl 

Osceola Hall will have a limited 
number of spaces available winter 
quarter. For info call 222-5010 or come 
by 500 Chapel Dr. "The Place For You 
at FSU" 



ROOMS FOR RENT ALPHA XI 
DELTA SORORITY $225 PER 
QUARTEk CALL DEDE 599 9778 or 
599-9922 




AN AFFAIR BEGAN 
WITH CHARLIE CHAN 

OH-OHH 

TALENT NIGHT AT JJ ZACKARY'S 
$50-$20-$10 PRIZES 
Anyone interested nuist audition Wed. 
2-0 P.M. 2394 W. Tenn. St. 



F RMMT NEEDED STARTING 
WINTER $80-mo.-»-V2Util.-V4mi. from 
sch. but I also have car.Leave 
message for Patty at 044-40M (340 
Beliamy) 

F RAAMT 2BR DUPLEX OWN ROOM 
$75 A MONTH 1-3 UTILITIES $50 
DEPOSIT 1BLK FROM CAMPUS 
224-8928 



WASH.DC Round trip leave after 
Thur 14th AM8.rehjrn by Jan3 U-6234 
or mess-044-230i.for Thorn VMocp. 



Non smoke f rmmt to share 2 bdrm 
apt in downtown area. Prefer serious 
student wtwgetscrazy occasionally to 
preserve sanity. 214-0574 Susanna 



Fm rmmt to share 2 brm apt, my furn 
It's nice. Near FSU. nonsmokar OOt 
mo 1-3 util Kristin 576-9009 

HUNGRY STUDENTS who love to eat 
to ioin our unlimited seconds meal 
plan served In you university 

cafeteria. Forget the hassles of dishes 
artd ctwMse from me large selection of 
daUcMus fdods. 



WANTED: RIDE TO New OrlOOns 
AFTER WED. 13Bl. WHLL PAY. 
CALL 224-0603 

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$000 

INSTANT CASH PAID FOR: 

ALL GOLD RINGS! 
MEN'S CLASS RH4GS $10-030 
WEDDING BANDS $7-$20 
ConcBtton 0. Laote Do NOT Matter 
Wo^lM Datarminao Price 

HOO OA UQ .BUYING COINSI I ! ! 

SILVER DOLLARS $4 each and up 
Buying all silver, gold, other eotas 
CALL FOR PRICES 

224-0767 Days LEAVE MESSAGE 
224-1734 tMLE.-Evcs, PHILIP 

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$oosossos 



ROOMATE NEEDED RIGHT NOW 
MAN. 080 A MONTH PLUS 1-9 

EXPENSES. IV, Ml FROM CAMPUS 
CALL JOHN OR HIS BROTHER AT 
576^3016 LIKE SOON. 



Liberal Fem Rntmt to share 3 bdrm 
hse near FSU $75 mo.-Hme-ttiird wMI 

nice yard 576 5039 

HOUSEMATE WANTED, BEAUTI- 
FUL HOUSE 1 MILE SE OF 

CAMPUS. LARGE YARDS. TREES. 
WINDOWS. 100 /MONTH. 576-4798 
EVENING 

Desperately need someone to take 
over conh'act at Cash Hall starting 
Winter quarter. SiO b onus 224-1007 

F roommate wanted own room but 
need own bed rent 00 per mo 1-3 util 
short drhw ta FSU SOO^ Kaop 

trying 

MALE RAAMT Starting in Jan Two 
bedrm furn, walk to FSU. $86 -♦- 1-3 

util Call 576-9972 



ROOMMATE WANTED 

$60 mo. -I- 1-3 utilities 
1810 Pepper 575-2824 




Keep in tune 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNING 
RCSTOR AT I ON , MOV I N6S, 
ESTIMATES 



PAINTING 

1 WASHING 

experienced & reasonable 
Call Jeff 224-7745 far astimata 



Fast 
selec. 



ate typist-IBM correcting 
disserts mss. Linda 



PF ^^.^'-^ P'Xg AND AMAHOi 
A MWlaoome tongue is a trt^T^ 
but perverseness merein , 

RicJ* ' '"''^^^ '5 4*5 

6th FLOOR DEVINEY. 
THANX FOR A GREAT QUAarM 
MUCH LOVE, HEIDI 

MERRY CHRISTAAAS TO 
THE GILS OF FEA 

FROM TINA'S DANN Y 

BK SUCKS GOOBS BESIDES TN^ 
YOU ARE ALLRIGHT. ~ 
MEMIY CHRISTMAS 

S a lKINS-PbTle 01 IN y^ 
iro aMNOt mm, Christmas is hert 
»-o»e,YaMri > 

STIVE ABBATE, 

CONGRATULATIONS ON 
ACH I EV I NG ALL THAT YQu 
HAVE BUTMORE IMPORTANT 

HAPPY 19th BIRTHDAY! 



Rm mate neadad Jan 1st with 2 brad 
shxfents Mrm 2bath 75.00 mo. -1-1.3 
utilities. 85.00 deposit Call 
386-7869anytime Har tsfield Rd. 

Female to share 2brm apt IV2 miles 

tLS^^SH'^- Non-smkr preferred. 
222-4517 9a per mo -k- Vbalactric 

Rmmt wntd for 3 bdrm townhouse 

II£?J?,T** V? '^20 N. AAeridian 
No.230 (Seville) call 222-9544 

M or F roommate wanted for 3 bdrm 
house prefer grad stud $80 month plus 
13 uts Terry in Geog or 222 4497 

Need 1 roomate (Pref. female) neat 
and dependable. 4 bedrooms washer- 
dryer — call 576-0019 John or Chad 



Roomate wanted large 3bedroom apt. 
Will have own bedroom. CaH betwaen 
10 81 11 p.m. 222 7074 

Swingshif't mother wants female grad 
student to rent room. Rent reduced in 
exchange for babysitting. Call 
386-8743 after 6 p.m. 



Responsible, clean, non smoking 
rna\e to share l-bdh^. apt at PLAZA 
Apts If interested call 222-9905 
AFTER 6 p.m. 

Rmt needed for lg. cooperative house 
near FSU. Share responsibilities, 
food, expenses. Call 224-8094 

Christian Roommate wanted non- 
smoke 100 yds FSU. Split rent 160 mo. 
Vautil. Laundry, pool AC. MIKE 
644-4542 

Fenrtale roomate to share nice 2 
bedroom house. Wastter dryer. Etc. 
Call Debby 877-2534 

Fm. rmt. wanted for Jan. 1 one Ixlr 
furn $85 mon. -|- i/^ ele. 575-3358 or 



SUNNY DAY NURSERY SCHOOL 

Near FSU. Certified Teachers. 
Hours 7:30-5:». Call 877-0334 

Typing for students Si businesses, 
term papers & diss. U) yrs. experience 
phone 877-5159 after 0 p.m. 

BASS LESSONS 

Jaz2 and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 
Jim Croxier 22441534 

TYPING 

TERM PAPERS, MANUSCRIPTS, 
DISSERTATIONS PH. 575-3485 

Typing — all sorts — reasanaMa — 
correcting typewriter — transcripts 
of tapes. Reliable. Call 576-5915 9 to 5. 

I STRING TENNIS RACQUETS 
One day service. Lowest prices in 
town. Call BMI at S70«0 

New York tour 78 spend wk in NYC 

Lvs. Tall. Dec 15 rtns. 22. Includes 
trans and hotel price $143. For dtls 
PAS o >r 8783455. NOW 

APPLIANCE REPAIR 

Service on ail major appliances, air 
conditioning and heating. Sales 
reconditioned units with 90 day 
warranty. Call Marshall, days 
599-7079 (pocket beeper) 
Evamng OI»0018w LICENSED 

Typing -quick, qiMlity, 70c dbl-SpC pg 
Edit & rewrite at negotiable rales 
Kym Gross 224-8375 days 

I DO CHAIR WEAVING AND 

CANING. Good references, reason- 
able rates. Call Rhonda araimd 6 
evenings, mmn, 

Typing for shidents & businesses 
Term Papers 81 Diss. 10 yrs. OMpari- 
ence phone 877-5259 after 4p.m. 

FRIDAY AFTERNOON SPECIAL — 
MICHELOB beer 25 cents a glass. At 
THE PUB 3-7 pjn. 1312 W. T4 

St. 



YOUR A GREAT FRIEND 



MES 



Don't cut your gift list — rum m 
inflation: give a gift lliat b Iw 
OKponsive and still uncommon mt 



tophistfcated: get a 1979 caiadv 

with your computer portrait for $475 
at Computer Portrait, Lowtr Lmm. 
Norltiweo U Mall noKt to Thoalrt. 



MAC 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY I HOPE IT 
HAS BEEN A GOOD TRIP SO PAR 
YOU'RE BEAUTIFUL 
LQVE ALWAYS YOUR SEMI LADY 

FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO LIVE IN 
A ZOO LOONEY TUNES ARE JUS' 
FOR YOU 

soup and sa n d wich special- 
Post special sandwhich and ttot bow 
of soup for $2.45 from 5:00 10:30 p.m 
Don't forget oar yoBurt, inNis mt 

nuts. 

TODAY'S TRADING POST TREAT 
FREE medium beverage with itie 
purchase of a post special turkey 
ham. roast beef and cheese for 7 25 



To my big brott>er Doug, l wish yw 
peace, love and joy at Christmas. Wi 
will miss yoa next quonir. Low 

Donna 



To my little bro. Erique, have a vtry 
AMorry Oiristinaa and a greet Hm 
Year - Love your big sis, ~ 



MR. FLETCHER LET'S HAVE A 
HOT TIME BY FOLDING PAPER 
AND WRITING ON OUR NECKS' 
THE OIRL PROM NOLY CROSS 

Mr. Weenie man: Please have a 
waanie plan for celebration of your 
llatalBOtwr^ . mhavemmell 

SEEDS OF UNIVERSAL LIGffT 
CHRISTMAS BENEFIT Velma 
Frye, Charles 81 Gil, Santa Ciaus, 
Comedy Skits and You. 
Dec. 12, 9PM S2.00 adm. 



ROOMMATE WANTED SHARE 
NICE HOUSE $80 -I- UTIL NO 
TOBACCO AAARGOT 224-9689 



LOONEY TUNES PERSONALIZED 
SINGING MESSENGER SERVICE 
386 2526 1 DAY AOV 
222-8480 



Housemate M or F to share 3 br house 
by Stadium Private bedroom SlOO-mo. 
81 1-3 util. Call Ron at 5757485 eves. 



DEAR ELMODINE: 

You're cruising for a bruising. 

TO THE PUBLI C: _ , 

i first inHlal Is O. 




stay tuned tomorrow. 
A person who knows. 



Yeah, well you don't know that there 
is no Fl am ba oM on Sahirday. 

HELP! GONNA BE A BRiDE, NEED 
A RIDE TO DAYTONA SUN OR 
MONDAY! I PAY YOU! ALL 
EXPENSES! GOLDIE 7246458 KEEP 
TRYING! 



OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer full 
time. Europe, S. America, Australia, 
Asia, etc. All fields, $500-1200 
monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. 
Free info — Write: Intemalional Job 
Center, Box 4490-FB Berlcalay, CA 
94704. 



County Food Co-op is accepting 
resunr>es for the position of coordina- 
tor. Applications accepted Nov. M to 
Dec. 12. TtHJse with me five highest 
ratings will be contacted for an 
interview to talta placa on Doc. 17. A 
Msion will ba raacbad by lha itlh. 



Female companion wanted for flying 
trip to Eluthera. Must be mahire, 
intelligent 81 down la earth type. 
r>referably over 21 If Interested write 
me for more info R. Allen 8t3A Capital 
Circle South 32354 

WE TAKE THE TIME TO DO IT 

RIGHT Headquarters has henna, 
ponmandgraathairarts. Haadquar- 
ters 2017 W. Pensacola St. 5M-ISI1. 



To my special friends. Have a great 
year! I'll miss you L ove Moli oii 

DEAR ITALIAN STALLION. 

MERRY CHRISTAAAS AND HAVE 
FUN IN TAMPA ON NEW YEAR'S 
WATCH OUT FOR THE »f FOG ! 

I pay cash for things of Value, 
turn, tv, instruments, etc Danny s 
Yard sale 1017 Thomasviiie fi^°^. 

SB» 4 SM xmas umi mm 



per week; tiealth insurance, and 2 
weeks paid vacation. Additional info 
may be obtained at LCFC storefront. 

PROFESSORS FINALS GETTING 
YOU DOWN? LET LOONEY TUNCS 
SEND HIM SOME SOUND. 



COUPLE WOULD LIKE TO MEET 

Bi FEMALE ALL REPLIES WILL 
BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL. P.O. 
BOX 127B8 TALLY 



Greeks, dorms, GDI's, clut>s- -custom 
Jerseys, $4.95 Printed! Up the hill 81 
save money! BULLSHIRT 222-5209 



PHI MUS GOOD LUCK ON EXAMS 
AND HAVE A MERRY CHRlSTAMI 
LOVE, THE lUfHtTE FAIRY 

Toour DZ Wg broRiers Jim and Pt»ii 
Thanks for cutting and doUvering our 

Christmas tree. Love Dlt 



Waitress 81 kitchen help 

Apply in person this Swi. bat. Hand 2 
at 210 S. Adams 
Oydes and Costello's 



♦ ♦ ^ ♦ 



^PREGNANT? 
TAPPS offers free last and .. 

problem pregnancies. 222-7177 
9:30-11:3QAM, TTH 6-8PM 



Be good to your hair so it will be good 
to you. Lanham Products new at 
Headquarters Haircutting. 2817 W. 
Pensacola St. 576-1511. 

ANYONE WISHING TO OBTAIN 
CIRClJE OF GOLD CALL 515 6420 



MONGO 
HAPPY 21st! 



in WAffTTORCCetVe 



CALL 



NEED FEM RMT NOW LONG LEAF 
2BDR $404- UTIL 57 S 0283 CALt 
IM MEDIATELY!!! 

DEAR MS. L. PiPf PRIMIT, 

WE KNOW HOW MUCH YOU LOV| 
CONWAY TWITTY YOU CAN KEE^ 
ITASECRET NO AAORE 

A PERSON WHO KNO>^S_ 



nrnmrn 



f, December 8, 19f7B / 23 



-ELMODINE AND AAAAiur. 



OOR DEVINEY 



CHRISTMAS 
ILS OF FEA 

TINA'S OAMirr 



Y Christmas' 



pNGRATULATlONSON 

E BUT more IMPORTANT 

PPY I9lh BiRTHOAYi 
OUR A 6IICAT mCttO 

- MES 

your gift list becauM 
» give a gift ttwth Us, 

and still uocommSi 
cated: get a 1979 calenS? 
ur compolw portrait for U 75 
poter Portrait, Lower Level 
ood Mall next to T^Sfre ' 



f BIRTHDAY. I HOPE IT 
EN A GOOD TRIP to FAR 
E BEAUTIFUL. ^ 
ALWAYS YOUR SEMI LA DY 

'9.!v^ WHO LIVE IN 

-OONBY TUNCtJOIB JUST 



d sandwich SM^ial- 
scial sandwlikft and hot bowi 
for $2.45 from 5:00 10:30 p m 
wget our yogurt, fruits and 



5 TRADING POST TREAT: 
medium beverage with tite 
e of a post special: turkey 
last b eef and Oiaw for 2.25 

^'9 brother Doug, I wMt you 
oye and ioy at Chrlsfmas. We 
te you next quarlw'. Love 

ittie bro. Erique, have a very 
Christmas and a groat New 
^yowWgtls. Donna 

-ETCHER LET'S HAVE A 
ME BY FOLDING PAPER 
RITING ON OUR NECKS! 
RL FROM HOLY CROSS 

anie man: Please have a 
plan for celebration of your 
by-dah. ni haveminell 

.OF UNIVERSAL LIGHT 
MAS BENEFIT - Velma 

Carles & Gil, Santa Glaus, 
Skits and You. Tommy's 



miainefara 



PUBLIC: 

e's first teiifial it O. 

Jd tomorrow. 
wtK) knows. 



»ii you don't know that there 



ONNA BE A BRIDE, NEED 
TO DAYTONA SUN OR 
Yl I PAY YOUi ALL 

est GOLOte wmm kccp 



•clal iriondi, 
mist you Lawa 



Hawaa great 



ALIAN STALLION, 
f CHRISTMAS AND HAVE 
AMPA ON NEW YEAR'S. 
OUT FOR THgliPOGI 

I for things of Value, 
instruments, etc. Danny's 
1017 Ttwmasville Rd opeti 
un Xmas Btftal 224-7331 



: GOOD LUCK ON EXAMS 
E A MERRY CHRISTMAS 
-OV E, THE WHITE FAIRY 

big brothers Jim and Phil 
cutting and delivering our 
Lova02*s 



St! PARTjr HARDYl 
RECEIVE 



SA RMT NOW LONG LEAF 
f <^ UTIL STMHS CALL 
TELYIH ^ 

L. FIFI FRIMIT, 
V HOW MUCH YOU LOVE 
rWITTY. YOU CAN KEEP 
ET NO MORE. 
^ PERSON WHO KNOWS! 



ady Seminoles face Tulane 
aturday 3 game state sweep 



by gerald ensley 

ftMRiMtf Sports writer 

Having conquered the state of 
lorida, the FSU women's 
kctball team now takes its show 
the road. With victories over 
itetsoB, South Fkwrida, and Florida 
luring the past fortni^t, the Lady 
minoles travel to New Orleans 
s weekend for games against 
ulane and New Orleans Univcr- 
jiy Next week, after fmals, tiie 
romen travel to Memphis for a 
infrontation of Metro schools in 
e Liberty Bowl Classic. 
FSU coach Diane Murphy, 
[fiough unfamiliar with this year's 
grams at the two Louisiana 
hools. gives them their due. 
"The state of Louisiana is a 
tbed of women's basketball," 
(!4urphy noted. **LSU and 



rro 



Louisiana Tech field great teams 
every year and. in the small college 
ranks. Southeast Louisiana won the 
national title a couple of years 
ago." 

Murphy's main concern is the 
Liberty Bowl Classic. Last year, in 
a similar match-up of Metro teams, 
FSU finished second to Memplris 
State. Louisville and Cincinnati, 
last year's third and foarth phice 
finishers, return this year to fill out 
the four-team tournament. 

Starting a line-up of Cherry 
Rivers, Jackie Arnold, Laine 
Lasseter, Teresa Tinsley, and Rose 
Harper, Murphy will continue to 
substitute heavily. 

**Come January, when the 
schedule gets tougher, I hope to 
stay with a little more set line-up 
than i have," Murphy said. 




Jackie Arnold 



. . . pulls down rebound against 
Valdosta State 




Come see the 
1 people.. 




Fri8ch*s on ttw Campus: 
1 775 West Tennessee Street 



LPO 



Moore Auditorium 
Admission $1.50 



SPECTRUM IS FILLING 
jPOTS FOR WINTER QUARTER. 
INY BAND THAT PLAYS ANY 
ORIGINAL TUNES NOW IS YOUR 
CHANCE TO GET ON TELEVISION 
IfSU spectrum CALL2225503 ASK 
IfOR ISAAC ASST PRODUCER 



SIGAAA PHI'S 
IKHY DONT YOU CLEAN YOUR 
IDIRT FROM THE BRIDGE? 



THE CASH HALL RANDOM 
, NUMBER SOCIETY PROUDLY 
1 ANNOUNCES THAT TODAY'S 
I H ANOOM WUMSER IS POUR. 

FREE MICHELOt DRAFT 

FOR LADIES 
EVERYDAY 
} 4 pm 
C 9 pm 

POOR PAUL'S POURHOUSE 

The Little Sisters of Delta Tau Delta 
''gratulate Oeit fall graduates AAark 
ne«n and Jeff Branham i YOU ARE 

lOVEOI 

Hey, are you Delts getting Into the 
Christmas spirit? Your little sisters 
arertadyfforSat.nlgfitl 

Blue Eyes- 

When yovj love me right you can hear 
'"e hollar, \whoa my oh my, yes sir, 
you really know how. Now I want to 
know wtien. How aboiil tonight? 

A Lady Friend 

i am going to start a scandal. 

HMse help the 9 students charged 
Wring the police brutality at FSU 3 
*wks ago. Contributions to the 
Jefense may be sent to Capital City 

iwiiiiwi.""*' ^ 

IfEDED; VORBISH CELLIST. 
MUST ENJOY A GOOD WEEKEND 
?^ 0F ZOOMPHU NG. 

P\c^ mI'^?,'1"^'^'-^'^TINE 

AT w«Bw^"^ PRESENT 
^RESERVE DESK OF LIBRARY 

IMMACULATE TYPING - I'm SO 

I m hvin' in a tent with nothin' 

r.^? ' J '"V Shoes and 

can t afford booze. But I don't want 
your sympathy, just your tvDina 
S^'JSLii^ P*8el ConiSTDaXfut, 
jy Flambea u oHice. 

Howard Johnson s Restaurant Rym 
iS.m'^.Sar*^ ^ 

^XtJlSSSJi^^P^^ability. per- 
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Today we have two submissions: 




NO. 1 




More I 

"A life 
in Poems" 



by 

H Toffl Morriff 



FRIDAY 7:30^:30,1 1 :30 



RICHARD DREYFUSS 
MARSHA MASON 



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ATHENS* Ga. (UPI>— Hugh Dnrliafii's 

dectslofi to give up a dsch winning 
program at Florida State last March to take 
the reins at Georgia — a team with six 
straight losing seasons — baffled some 
haskethaD lollowefs. 

Durham left Tallahassee, where he had 
taken the Seminoles to the fCAA 
tournament three times in 12 years, to 
come to Georgia, a school which has never 
won the Southeastern Conference 
championship. 

But the veteran coach says Georgia has 
several positive things to make it easier to 
compete on the national level that were 
lacking at Florida State. 

**lf you're a competitor, you want to 
compete at the national level," explained 
Durham, whose Seminoles were runner-up 
to UCLA in 1972. 

"Florida State doesn't have a good 
on-campus facility. And Florida State is not 
the dominant school in the state. Those are 
the positive things that Georgia offered — 
our own facility; it's the dominant school in 
the state, and a total commitment to 
basketball." 

To get Durham, Georgia officials had to 
greatly increase that commitment. John 
Guthrie, fired alt^ poB^ng a 46-86 record 
lor five years, was making only $17,500 
and operating with a $15,000-a-year 
recruiting budget. 

In comparison^ Durham said top-ranked 
Dnke ^ent M^0Q0-6S,000 one year on 
tecniitiBg in balding Hs cufrent power- 
iMNise. 

* 'They've (Georgia officials) upgiraded 
the recruiting budget to the point where 
money has not been a faelor/' he said. 

Durham also got the Bulldogs to 
underwrite a radio network whk^ has 




Hugh Durham 

. . . Jeft FSU for Georgia last spring 

become the largest in the school's history 
to guarantee exposure of the program. 

He said he believes Georgia officials and 
alumni were embarrassed by the losing 
basketball program in comparison to 
successful football, tennis and golf teams. 

"Another factor is there is money to be 
made in basketball," he said. "To have a 
good program it's going to cost you 
$300,000-5400.000 a year. But if you are 
successful, you can make money for the 
total sports program. Basketball and 
football are really the only revenue 
producing sports." 

With four starters back from last year's 
11-16 squad. Durham hopes to have a 
winning season, but he admits it may take 
3-4 years before the Bulldogs challenge 
Kentucky and other SEC powers for the 
league title. 

"Any sooner than that would definitely 
be a surprise." he said. 





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Sliger denies busiiiess, education merger with A&M 



by beth nidowilM 
and Steve watkins 

FSU President Bernard Sliger Friday 
denied reports ui j possible merger of the 
Schixils of Business or the College of 
Education at Florida State University and 
Florida A&M. 

"As far as I'm coticemed. It's nothing but 
I a rumor," Sliger told a group of eight 
administraton from the FSU Schopi of 
[Business. 

Bob Uwtoii, FSU vice 



academic affairs, said he called the late 
afternoon meeting for Sliger to stem the 
tide of anxiety among business faculty after 
WCTV telev ision (channel 6) reported 
Wednesday evening that a merger was 
under consideration by the Department oi 
Health, Education and Welfare. 

Lawton said he had received numerous 
calls of concern about the reported merger 
from faculty, administrators and Tallahas- 
see residents. Sliger, who was out of town 
most of the week in Washington and Miami, 
said he lieard of the lepofts npoa his retnm 



Thursdav. 

*'lhe way I see it.*' said Sliger. "if 
\S s got something to say. they tell the 
board of Regents and they (the BOR) tell it 
to me." Sliger added he has not been 
contacted ' he Board on the matter. 

WCTV reporter Gary BaUnoff said he 
compiled the story from conversations with 
HEW officials and Delores Auzenae, 
special assistant to the chaaceUor for equal 

BOR. 

Anxenae woold neither ooofinp nor deny 



the repons last week when oootacted by 

The Flambeau. 

Auzenne did acknowlcdjfe i studv of 
duplication in programs at the University of 
Flsrida. FSU and FAMU was in progress at 
the request of HEW because the Florida 
State University System is not yet in full 
compliance with HEW guidelines for 
desegregation ndcr Title 6 ef the Civil 
Rights Act. 

In addition to southiy of businfti tad 



ftiivi iQ MERGER, 



u 



Florida 




Monday 

December 11, 1978 




ierving TaUalMane for M yuan 




See you January 

With this issue. The Fkmkmu sigas 
off until January when we'll resume 
publication on tkie fourth with the start of 
the winter qaarter. We wish our readers a 
merry exam week followed by an even 
Merrier Christmas, a Happy New Year, a 
Good Groundhog's Day, a Vafiaat 
Valentine's, a Peachy St. Piirtricfc's. aa 
Earnest Easter . . . 

Aaywiqr, we'D see yoa hi 1979. 



ickel hike in gas price predicted 




WASHDiCroN (UPI) — Gasofiae ibices 
ia c ieaie ahoal five cents per gaHoa 
xt year, bat p re di ct ed shortages of gas 
bd home heatmg oil will aot occur, 
bmdard CXI of bkhaaa's chaiipenKMi said 
;terday. 

[john Swearingea, iaterviewad na CBS*s 
kce the Nation program, said a price 
icrease of five cents per gallon is **in the 

llpark." 

But he said the size of the increase is 
pendent upon: 
Prices set by the Organization of 
troleum Exporting Countries. 
The outcome of labor negotiations at 
ineries. 



•And changes in Department of Energy 
price regulations. 

Stttidard of Indiana numbers among the 
nation's eight largest oil refineries. 

Swearingen attributed the recent spot 
shortages in unleaded gasoline to an 
"extraordinary increase in consumption 
this fall" and governmental regulations. 

Under current rules, an oil company must 
continue to supply any customer it had in 
1973, and switching supplies to other areas 
of the country is banned. 

"The fact that we are under price 
regulation has inhibited the ability of the 
industry to supply what the people want at 
the places they want it," he noted. 



He said free-floating prices would liave 
**kicieased the supply sigiuflciyitly." 

No general shortages of home heating oil 
should occur next year, Swearii^ien said, if 
oil imports are steady and refinery workers 
don't s^e. 

He discounted the effect of a possible 
cutoff of Iranian oil. 

He. predicted disruptions in Iranian ml 
fields w«Hikl not be lengthy and saul he is 
hopefiil Saudi Arabia would make up any 
shortfall by increasing its daily production. 

Another major factor in the supply of fiiel 
oil is the possibility of a strike at U.S. 
refineries when contracts expire Jan. 8. 

Swearingen suggested this would be 



l&ely "if the unions attempt to bresk the 
govemmeat's volaatary wage price coatrol 
pfogram." He said their current wage 
demands "exceed ooaipliaaoe gaiddteea.*' 

**This could have serioys eoeteqaeaoet 
on supply both of fuel oil and of gmoKae 
this winter and ii^ aext spriag^" he said. 

Over the long tern, he predicled there 
would be no shortage of oil in the world 
"from a physical stamlpoiat" if the 
"political elements of the world win permit 
it to be extracted.** 

* 'ToBiorrow's energy is going to cost 
more than yesterday's — the question is not 
tiie resource base avidlable, the question is 
how much can be produced at what price?** 



Survey: Male tears okay 
inly at funerals, divorces 



ir 



by bath rudowato. 

It's okay for a man to cry in sorrow at a 
loved one's funeral, but he'd better stem 
^those tears of joy at seeing a beautiful 
sunset if he wants to win the approval of 
most Tallahasseeans. 

At least that's what a survey of public 
^opinion and social mores by sociologist 
Susan Hesselbart revealed. Dr. Hessel- 
bart, an asstxriate professor of sociology 
at FSU, said the figures show that while 
more of the 415 local adults she surveyed 
believe it is all right for women to cry in 
public or private than men. they also 
believe some events warrant tears from 
either sex. 

More than 90 percent of the survey 
sample felt i! was equally suitable for a 
bereaved man or woman to cry in public 
at a funeral if the deceased was loved. 
And about three-quarters of the 
respondents indicated either sex was 
equally entitled to weep m private after a 
spouse asked for a divorce. 



Hesselbart said she got ^ idea for an 
in-depth look at crying frmn a survey she 
conducted in 1975. One question aj^ed if 
respondents thought it was okay for men 
to cry to express their emotions. An 
overwhelming majority answered ^at it 
was. 

' "I told a class about the study^ and one 
lazy-but-brilliant guy raised his hand and 
commented that my question didn't take 
into account the situation or reason/' she 

said. 

Thinking about his remarks, she 
decided to ask such questions in a study. 

Hesselbart selected the ques^tions by 
asking random undergraduate classes at 
FSU when they would cry. She had tried 
to formulate questions by asking random 
people when they thought it was okay for 
people to cry, she said, but she got little 
useful information by that method. 

"It was hard to get anyone to say 

turn to CRYING, pmgm 16 



IV 



'It 



YA 



^1 



P. 



2 / Monc 



Sliger sets committee 

to decide student role 
at FSU comitry club 

by Howard libin 

flambeau staff writer 

No decision has been made on whether students will be 
allowed to use the sprawling Winewood Country Club, 
which was donated to FSU last week by a TaMaiuissee 
fealty firm. 

The FSU Foundation agreed last Friday to assume a 
$950,000 mortage on the 121 -acre luxury facility located on 
Old St. Augustine Road in southeast Tallahassee 3 miles 
east of the capitoi. ttfeatiKes a swimBiiiig pool, golf course 
and chtbhonse. 

According to Millard Noblin, director of St. Augustiae 
P rope rti es, the land is valued at neaily $2 million tmd 
woitfd be worth far more if divided into renteiitial kyts. 

Nobfin acknafwle48ed his firm had bees lonng money on 
the club, bttt denied that was the only reaiOA for malEiag 
the gift to the naivetstty. 

'*We wasted to see the dub coatiDiie and were aware 
that the university was in t ereste d in sudi a facility," said 
noiHui. 

making money was our only motive, we would have 
sold it on the open mariiet." 

Suggestions on what to do with the dub range from 
selling the property to establishing a university club for 
students, faculty, staff and employees. 

A committee made up of students and faculty has been 
appointed by FSU President Bernard Sliger to make 
recommendations on how the facilities should be used. 

Student Body President Neal Friedman, a member of 
the committee, said any plan for Winewood must allow 
students to use the club. 

Friedman also pointed out that since the students were 
not going to get as much use out of the new 
Tallahassee-Leon County Civic Center as expected, 
Winewood could take up part of the gap. 

**The faculty uses the Seminole Reservation, which is 
funded by student fees,** Friedman said. "So by right 
students should, be able to use any facility open to the 
faculty.*' 

Faculty Senate President Jim Pitts said he feels the 
faculty would be willing to work on the concept of a 
univmity club, where all those involved with the 
university would be allowed to gather. 

'*The university club would go a long way in fostering 
interaction between the university and the community," 
he said. "By university, I mean the students as well." 




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Student challenges dissertaiion rule 



FLAMBEAU MODday, DeCMIter 11, 1978 / 3 



by Men f elsifig 

flambeau staff wntvr 

An FSU doctoral student is taking the university to task 
over a university rule that says he must sign an a greement 
with a nucrofiim pubkation company bdm he can 
graduate. 

That agreement, the signing of which is required of afl 
doctoral candidates, reads in part: "Through my graduate 
school. 1 agree to supply you. Univenity Micrafifans 
International, with my dissertation ... I grant you the 
exclusive rights to reproduce and distribute copiea of the 
dissertation and/or abstract in and/from microfofna. . . " 

Student Tom Beck, who already has hired a lawyer to 
help him in his protest, queattea whether the uuversily 
can legitimately require him to 8%n the agreement. He 
claims the wofding leaves it mdcar what pohfiortkm 
rights he ia actually signing away. 

"I wort Dp to the (graduate atudies) office to pick up all 
those fonna," aaid the docterel atndent hi biology. "When 
1 noticed that one It soft of angered me. I went to talk to 
Dean (Roiaett) Johnsen about it. He flatly tdid me that If I 
• didn't sign the form I wouldn't graduate. I told the dean I 
thought it ought to be a student's option whether to sign 
tiie ag r ee m e nt or not." 

Acoofdingto Beck, Johnaen, aaaodate dean of graduate 
studies, advlaed hhn to hire a private attorney if he wanted 
to preaa the iaaoe. Bec^ plana to eomi^ lus disaertation 
and graduate In March. 

Johnaen, oootacted yesterday, confirmed Beck could not 
graduate wMiOBt signing the form. 

He said the requhement has been in force for 
approxInuKtdy twenty years and Is l^;al. He described it as 
a service to tiie student "to insure minimum access of the 
fruits ci his work to the scholarly world." 

"He's not signing away his rights," said Johnsen. 
"He's only si/^ning away one right, the right to have this 



•9 



Acoofdhig to Johaaen, shMsa no other company oflers 
this service, and nace University Microfibns. a subsidiary 
of Xerea c o r pot a ii o n , haa worlMde coverage, a atadairt 
loses nothhig by aigmng. 

But Beck's hiwyer, Jtefc Levfaie. said the eompany*s 
■Begad Mwpoiy m tfie aervicc may paeaeol a legtf 
ptuMom that overshadows orighud question of the 
university's r^ to denmnd tiie student oonqittance with 
the agreement. "I Just hope we haven't opened a can of 
wQtma." he said. 

Beck oonqihdaed on more political grounds, saying "I 
don't particular^ Uke the idea of a private corporation 
making a profit off my dissertation." He added that an 
inter-library kMn employee told him since Xerox entered 
the dissertation busllfbss. libraries virtually had stopped 
kwiung dttsertatkms for the price of postage, and were 
instead tdKng borrowers to purchase one for $16 from the 
microfUm company. 

Johnsen said he thought Bcdt misconstrued both the 
intent and the meaning of the rule. **He thinks we and 
Xerox arc trying to rip him off. I think he thinks that a 
regular publisher might want to charge more for a 
dissertation than they (University Microfilms) do. He's 
worried that they'll get rich and keep him from aetting 

-•aA- t* "TOW 

ncn. 

But accordmg to Johnsen. the mkrc^m contract does 
not precMe Beck from publishing his work to another 
fnnn. 

"Countless students have signed this and subsequently 
published their work in journals or in books. I've never 
known anyone to have a problem . . . Lawyers have a way 
of making simple issues difficult." 

Attorney Levine said he plans to confer with university 
attorney Gerald Jaski on the matter earlv this week. 



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4 ' Monday, December n, t978 FLORIDA FLAn^r/MI 



Letters 



Abortion, death penalty positions are hypocritical 



Editor: 

I applaud your editorial of Dec. 4 on the 
death penalty. Happily, I learned as I was 
writing this letter that Pierre and Andrews, 
set to die by a Utah fhring squad on Dec. 1, 
have been granted an indeHnite stay of 
execution. Perhaps your arguments that 
the death penalty is final, thitt it is applied 
with prejudice towards the poor and 
mhioHties, and that studies of its deterrent 
effects are inconclusive have caused jurists 
to ponder long and hard oa whether capital 
punishment, which you call murder, should 
be allowed. But your argument of the 
sanctity of life is the one closest to my 
heart. You wrote: "life is holy; life is all we 
have; and not a single person's life can be 
justifiably lost at the hands of another with 
the exception of self-defense." 

Yet. here in the midst of your beautiful 
and ardent appeal for the lives of Dale 



Pierre and William Andrews your gross 
moral inconsistency is most striking. In 
past editorials I believe you have clearly 
stated your strong support of the 1973 
Supreme CoUrt decision which gave a 
pregnant wmnan the legal right and 
abort her fetus anytime up until the birth of 
the child. The Supreme Court by that 
ruling has no Diore made abortion moral 
and justifiable than it has made capital 
punishment moral and justifiable by ruling 
such legal revenge by the state as 
constitutional. (The same applies for the 
1857 Dred Scott decision.) 

Fetologists have learned that the 
developing heart of a human embryo is 
pumping blood it has produced itself at 
only 25 days after conception. Fetal brain 
waves are measurable (with current 
technology) at 45 days after conception 
while the fetus is completely formed with 



all internal organs and quite sensitive to 
pain by eight weeks. Surely anyone who 
truly holds to the sanctity of life can hardly 
deny that as early as two to three months 
into the pregnancy abortion is the IdRing of 
a human being. Abortion as self-defense is 
extremely rare in modern prenatal 
medicine. For those unsure of the 
immorality of abortion in these critical 
months 1 ask that you consider that 
abortion, like the death penalty, is final. 
New scientific evidence about life before 
birth, especially in the first 15 days as the 
cerebral cortex is being formed, has 
increased the awe with which man looks at 
his one-celled beginnings. But new 
evidence is too late for the now six million 
legal abortion \ictinis. 

Up until early last year, abortions were 
done at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital by 
local doctors as late as 28 weeks into the 



pregnancy. Prostaglandin was injected 
directly into the fetus to kill it and to iiuiuce 
labor, all perfectly legal. Paradoxically. 
TMH regularly cares for premature infants 
t>om earlier than '28 weeks. In some of 
these prostaglandin abortimis the baby (at 
this late date any euphemistic term tike 
**product of conception" is ludicrous) was 
bom alive, issued a birth certificate, lived a 
few hours, died, issued a death certificate, 
and later given a funeral. If you cannot see 
these abortions as the unju stilled killing of 
other human beings (especially it you. like 
I. were born premature), then 1 suspect 
vour position on the death penalty is a 
sham. I uphold the sanctitv of all lives 
whether they are just beginning, arc 
marred by handicaps, or are lived 
murderously. Sadly, here in America in 
1978. privacy and personal freedom arc 
holy — life is not. 

JolmKitchin 



World hunger is 
Christmas focus 



World hunger has been the focus of a month-long 
emphasis of the Campus Ministry Association at FSU. As 
students, faculty and others have studied the facts and 
iffiues involved, our concern for what we can do has grown. 

We would lyte to challenge all serious-minded persons in 
Tallahassee during this season of gift-giving to be mindful 
of those for whom a nutritious meal is a luxury they can 
rarely afford. Our suggestion would be that each person 
designate a percentage (10 percent) of what he/she spends 
on gifts this season and use that money to combat world 
hunger. 

Conservative estimates predict a $10 billicm business this 
December. That could mean potentially $1 billion for world 
hunger. More realistically, it would mean that, if any of us 
spends $150 on presents for family and fiiends, we would 
give $15 for world hunger. 

The iponey could be sent to the hunger programs of your 
choice. Some tiiat have been recommended to us as effective 
and trustworthy are: 1) Project Cheer, c/o Trinity United 
Methodist Church; 2) Salvation Army; 3) Church World 
Service. 475 Riverside Drive, New York, N.Y. 10027; 4) 
Campaign for Human Development, 1312 Massachusetts 
Avenue, N.W.. Washington, D.C. 20005; and 5) Bread for 
the World, 207 E. 16th Street, New York, N.Y. 10003. 

We hope you share our concern for the inequity of food 
distribution m our world and will join us in this effort. 

Students and Ministers 
Campus Ministries AssockUioa 

Additions to FCI story 

Editor: 

Would you mind if I offered a few additions and 
amendments to the fme story by Jim Cox titled "Inmates 
get ^addicted* to running, meditation**? 

We do not teach TM to the inmates at the Federal 
Cocrectional Institute. TM is a registered trademark and 
applies only to authorized situations. At FCI we do provide 
instruction in a form of meditation recommended by Dr. 
Herbert Benson in his recent bestseller RekuaOion 



In accord with our grant from FSU (Shell Co.), we offer 
various incentives to provide motivation for becoming 
involved in the program including pens, notebooks on which 
to keep record of activities, headbands, old shoes, ribbons, 
medals and certificates. 

Dr. Bruce Grindal of the anthropology department is the 
project's consultant on meditation. 

The concept of positive addiction is derived from the work 
of Los Angeles psychiatrist Dr. William Glasser, author of 
Reality Therapy and the Identiy Society as w e 11 as Positive 
Addiction which is published by Harper & Row. 

Alexander Bassin 
School of CrimlBology 

Is Lohman serious? 

Editor: 

This letter is addressed to James Lohman of the Coalition 
for Iranian Democracy and Indcp* nHr nee. As concerns your 
letter to Dr. Sliger in the Dec. 6 issue of The Flambeau, 1 
have one question — are you serious? 

There seems to be a major stage production in the works 
concerning the incident of Nov. 15. Hollywood would be 
proud. This has become the biggest game in town! 

It appears that a small group of people are at such a loss 
for something to occupy their time and minds that they are 
trying to make as big a deal out of this as possible. Your 
choice of words, Mr. Lohman, border^ on ridiculous. 
Fascistic heavy-handedness gestapo tactics, club- 
wielding riot police, plain-clothed predators. Perhaps Steve 
Martin needs a wild and crazy comedy writer. 

Is it possible that you have forgotten some of the facts 
surrounding the incident? Or perhaps you don*t believe in 
**two sides to every story." How open is your mind? The 
FSU security officers who were assigned to the 
demonstration were under orders to not carry riot sticks or 
wear helmets. They were unarmed, bne of these officers 
received bruised ribs, one was seriously beaten about the 
face, one suffered leg injuries, one managed to save serious 
head injuries only when he blocked the blow of a 
club-wielding Iranian. What about these unarmed officers 
— who speaks for them? 

This university is not an island unto itself. It » part of the 
Tallahassee community and as such comes under the 
jurisdiction of the local audiorities. That fact was well 
substantiated in the tate sixties and eariy seventies. You 
cannot expect to b<- free to do anything you wish. 

If you are so omfiised by Dr. Sliger*s silence perhaps you 
should put some rational thought into the entire situation. 
Dr. Sliger knows that the matter is novi- a court issue. All 
>^ **dcmaiids** ai^ petitions jmd mardies and etc. will 



not reverse that. If you are so certain that the nine arrested 
students are so innocent, why cto you show such fear 
concerning their court appearances? Perhaps if you stopped 
hero-worshipping everybody who gets into trouble you could 
see things more clearly. 

I always get a kick out of peple who issue demands. Who 
gave you the authority to "demand" that laws be ignored? 
What are you going to do if your "demands" aren't met? 
Maybe you could "demand" all students be on the dean s 
list. How about "demanding" the football team an 11-0 
season next year. 

If you can come up with the proven support of the majority 
of the FSU students, faculty, and staff then you can 
seriously request the support of the administration in your 
plight. Until then enough! 

C^ydelca 

Ungrammatical sports 

Editor: 

. . .And I thought The Democrat's sports writing was bad. 
Hey Sid. you're the greatest; perhaps you could get 
"untracked" to take the English 101 or maybe a high school 
refresher course in grammar. Webster's has informed us 
that the prefix un-, which we see so profoundly in your 
articles, refers to being placed in front of adjectives or verbs 
meaning "not; do the opposite of; reverse; contrarv to." 

Alas, we svmpathi/e with you since your writing leads us 
to believe our Seminoles are always on the right track, but in 
the fact of defeat or feeling so comfy they must get 
uncranked to make an offensive advantage. We hope in the 
future that the un-derstanding of such un-informed usage of 
the prefix un- will be completely un-derstood. Let*s see. did 
we put everything on tnsk to crank up Sid? 

BMiOpfive 

What Health Center 

Editors 

Every quarter I spe^, as does every other FSU student, 
SIO on a **health fee.** The money k tacked onto my tuition 
fee and I do not have the opportunity to redeem it even if I 
am wilting to forego the health ser f kes. I am willing to do so 
as I've been to the Health Center three times, none of which 
did any good. 

This situatioir prompts me to say that if the proposed 
FPIRG funding mcthcxl is unfair, then so is the Heahh 
Center funding procx*dure. 



al 



was injected 
(t and to induce 
Paradoxically, 
[mature infants 
is. In some of 
IS the baby (at 
listic term like 
ludicrous) was 
tificate. lived a 
[ath certificate. 
I you cannot see 
|tified killing of 
illy if you. like 
^hen I suspect 
penalty is a 
|v of all lives, 
eginning, are 
[>r are lived 
jin America in 
|i treedom arc 



^he nine arrested 
show such fear 
)s if you stopped 

trouble you could 

demands. -Who 
laws be ignored? 
ids" aren't met? 
)e on the dean*s 
ill team an 11-0 

>rt of the majority 

then you can 
iisiialion in your 

Clyde Rea 

sports 



writing was bad. 

you could get 
ivbc a high st hool 
has informed us 
rotoundly in your 
[djectives or verbs 
c; contrary to." 
(r writing leads us 
right track, but in 
they must get 
e. We hope in the 
informed usage of 
)od. Let's see, did 
id? 



inter 



ther FSU student, 
d onto my tuition 
ledeem it even if I 
i m willing to do so 
ICS. none of whicl| 

It if the proposed 
so is the Healtlir 




FLOfUOA FLAMMMi Monday, 0«:amber II. 1878 / S 



Letters 



Black Mrority s 
show was success 

Editor! 

It should not go unnoticed that DelU Sigma Theta 
sorority put on one of the most culturally wkking slKms I 
have witnessed since my matriculatioo at FSU. They 
cinematically took us from the pre-emandpation overt 
racism of the cotton fields to the now higUy-stmctmed, 
subtle racism exemplified by the Bakke case. 

For those cynics, skeptics and critics who fill the paper 
with what black Greeks don't do. I wish you had been 
th^re. And 1 hope you don't fail to fill the paper with praise 
and adulation for the Deltas and' tbeir {Mges. They 
deserve it for an excellently prepared and presorted show 
for the benefit and ei^ghferaettt of all btftci people. 
Right on Deltas. 

Affired Williams 

The spectre of Adolf 



to efimtmrte the oppoaeiMs ofliis rigid Ideas, b 10 
doinjg. he gatiieffed a gireirt nnnriier of foiowefs wto 
Ma-wiohcd . believed tliat folowiag tlie teller was the 
key to piosperky. la tlMir opinioa everybody against the 
leadw's g ov ei Bmcnt was the emaay of the natioa. The 
leaden aMi followers practiced whatever they believed in. 
Then there was a real disaster. They de^bigyed other 

nations as we» as thefar own natioa. . .the leader was called 
Hitler. 

Now history is being lepeirted m this conntiy. The 
leader (U.S. hnperli^sm) htm found his followers who have 
lost their foeltftgs and rationality and act like a robot. 
These robots repeat only one thing: "We say whatever 
they have told os to say. We do whatever they have 
instructed us to do.*' 

Imperialism also enjoys the existence of another people: 
the class of uncaring pcuple or no reaction ones ( pcopic 
who care enough to stop and chant "We don't care, * are 
excluded from this type. They are second rank robots.) No 
reaction people let die leaders and followers do what they 
have planned to do. 

The people who care, who are more aware than to be 
tomed to a mechanical tool, who are more human than to 
have imperialistic ideas have a great responsibility: they 
should not let more disasters come. 



Have a 
MERRY CHRISTMAS 



For those who blindly follow the U.S. imperialism and 
think CIA as the only source of truth, I have a story to tell: 

Once upon a time there was an ambitious leader who 
wanted to be the master of the world. He believed that his 
people were superior to people of other nations and 
deserved to rule over all the world. 

To promote his prejudicial ideas, the leader directed a 
well-planned propaganda. He also organized a secret 





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6 / Monday, December 11, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Letters 



ROTC: 'Great way of life' 



From the recent articles and letters I 
have seen in The Flambeau , I have 
concluded that the majority of the campus 
is not aware of what ROTC is or the 
opportunities it provides. Air Force 
programs are one tn the same. It is true 
that at one time both ground and air forces 
were grouped together in the Department 
of Army; however, that was before 1947, 
the year when the Air Foeoe became a 
s^MUrat^ service. "HMtay tfley m sm 
separate, although^ they coordinate Hieir 
activities in defense of tiie nation. 

Here on campi^- the Reserve Officer 
Tn^ing Corps programs aie set up for 
both the Army and Air Force. They provide 
students with a taste of what a career in 
either of the services coidd oHer diem. 
There are * 'look-see" courses that deal 
witii the philosophy, lifestyle, job and 
travel opportunities, and experiences that 
an officer would encounter on active duty. 

What are some of the advantages of 
joining the Air Force ROTC program? I was 
first attracted by the scholarship program 
available to medical students. The 2-, 3- 
and 4-year scholarships available to 
students in technical fields, e.g. math, 
computer science, physics, meteorology, 
and chemistry piqued my interest.. The 



SI 00 per month non-taxable allowance and 
the prospect of job security gave me a 
nudge. 

Both cadets and officers in the 
Aerospace Studies Office, while concerned 
with the recent article dealing with Harold 
Smith's alleged "ripping off' of the 
government, were more than mildly 
amused. The semi-anonymous person 
failed to mention that the system he 
**cheated** was set up so as to rid itself of 
diose who would be a detriment to its 
professional ranks. He did boA the Air 
Force as well as himself a service by being 
eliminated before commissioning. This 
country has enough dishonest people in 
high places and certainly doesn't need to 
acquire more. (Thank you, Mr. Smith; 
sorry you missed out.) 

On behalf of the cadets and officers in 
FSU's Air Force ROTC program, I invite 
you to drop by the office and see what's 
available to you. We have social and 
service organizations, an honor society, 
sporting events, and plenty of congenial 
people. Don't brush it off before you see 
for yourself. You may miss out "a great 
way of life." 

Cadet Catherine D. Lambert 

AFROTC 



FSU cops are insensitive 



Editor: 

We don't understand the FSU police. 
Our boss is handicap|fed and it is diftfettft 
for her to walk long distances so she parked 
at our bade door on the grass. Two 
policemen pulled up beside her and made 
her show her driver's license though she's 
been in business here for 14 years. She 
tried to explain to them her situation but 
one policeman was very rude and in so 
many words told her to park her car 
elsewhere and get to the shop the best way 
she could. (She doesn't corne to the shop 
very often and then only on business 
matters for 30 to 45 minutes at a time.) 

We called Mr. Tanner (FSU police) and 
Mr. Denham (FSU public safety 
administration assistant) but neither was 
much help. 

What m^l^es us so mad is that FSU had a 



concert Oct. 22 and cars and vans were 
parked everywhere. I'd like to ask Mr. 
Tanner, Mr. Denham and the policemen 
what is the difference between one small 
car parked for 30 minutes and all the cars 
and the garbage left on the ground after 
the concert which our tax money is helping 
to clean up? They ought to make the 
students clean up that mess once and it 
probably wouldn't happen again. You'd 
think they would be prouder of their 
campus grounds than that. We couldn't 
even open our back door, it looked and 
smelled so bad. 

Please give the handicapped a break — 
parking at FSU is terrible. I just hope Mr. 
Denham, Mr. Tanner and the two FSU 
policemen are never in the situation our 
boss is in. 

Joyce Jones 



Mad as hell at crowd reaction 



I'm mad ^ hefl. What particularly 
pissed me off was the rude response of 
some members of the audience at the 
Halloween concert. To be more specific, 
some concert-goers had the disrespect to 
shower a certain band. 

Those members of the audience had 
every ri^t to show their distaste. 
Howler, the method which they chose to 



employ was definitely in poor taste. 

Every performer deserves a certain 
respect, whether or not their material 
agrees with the audience. These particular 
members of the audience failed to show the 
least bit of respect. I. for one, found their 
actions inconsiderate, immature, and 
unbefitting of college students. 

Stephen Byrne 



American Heart Association t 

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Dust bowl becoming Grand Canyon 




Letters 




Editor: 

Fortunately for the faculty and staff of FSU, they do not 
have to park in the fiarking lot at the ooraer of Woodward 
and Jefferson Streets, commonly referred to as the dust 
bowl, as do the lowly students (at least, tiie stndents who 
own cars are treated that way by the fact tiiat we have to 
park theieX. Each day, madness ensoes as cm scramble 
over hill and dale to beat the next car and not have to 
wander aiomid In that barren desert in search of another 
parking spot, while mlssfaig another class, and avoiding a 
parking ticket for not parking in a designated area, all the 
time causing much damage to ball joints and transmissions 
(yes. transmissions)! My roommate no longer has a 
useable transmission in his car. I have a $65 ball joint 
repair job coming up before I go home for Christmas. 

You can imagine my delight on the first day I arrived at 
FSU to find 1 could park my car almost directly underneath 
my dorm window. You can imagine my dismay when, after 
a parking ticket, I would have to pay $12 to park in a 



so-called parking lot (it more resembles a roller dcrbv rink 
or the dodge'ems ride at the amusement park) uith a 
surface more dustv and more rocky than Death Vallev and 
the Grand Canyon put together. I have already been 
involved in one fender-bender in the dust bowl due to the 
superb conditions there. 

Over Christmas vacation. 1 will be buying a 1977 auto. 1 
do not intend to pav for another parking sticker, nor would 

1 subject a possession ot mine of that value to such abuse 
as to park it in the dust bowl. Unfortunately, I will have a 
short distance to walk, but my S6.000 investment will be 
much better off for it. 

1 am asking our President Sliger and the obscure person 
who is responsible for the condition of roads and parkmg 
lots to try and park their cars during the hours of 10 a.m. to 

2 p.m. any week day in the dust bowl. I'm sure that if they 
had to park there every day as we mere students do, (and 
I'm sure that our president drives a much more valuable 
piece of machinery than many of us), the dust bowl, 
(rapidly becoming the Grand Canyon, due to kst week's 
rain and the upcoming rainy season) would be paved in no 
time at all. 

DnvMMMlii 



Eckerd College is not 'rinky-dink' 



Editor: 

This letter is in response to your front page reference on 
Nov. 27 to "rinky-dink" Eckerd CoUege. I question the use 
of this particular adjective. Perhaps you are referring to 
the fact that Eckerd 's student population is rather small 
(around 1,(X)0); in that sense the diminuitive is 
appropriate. Or maybe it's that you are lacking that 
all-important yardstick of an educational institution's 
prowess, its success on the gridiron on a given Saturday in 
the fall. You see, Eckerd College has no football team. It 
might be elucidating to your readers, however, to note that 
in spite of its tender age (Eckerd was founded in 1960 as 
Fl<mda Presbyterian College). Eckerd College has 
established a national reputation as an outstanding and 
kinovative academic instkuticm. In a recent survey. Eckerd 
raidied second only to New Cdlege in Sarasota as this 



m 

state's leading undergraduate institution according to 
academic standards. Since then New College has 
succumbed to irresistable monetary overtures from the 
Board of Regents and has been subsumed by the State 
University System. Eckerd also places iri the top 5 percent 
nationally in success rate of graduates attaining 
acceptance into graduate and profes^onal sehools. notably 
medical schools. 

We Eckerd College alumni are rightfully proud of our 
alma mater and would hope that in the Mure you might be 
more accurate in the terminology used to describe that 
institution. And by the way. although Eckerd may be no 
match for FSU in the "big-time," i.e. big moiiey college 
sports of fo(^ba]| and basketball, we'd be glad to take you 
on. any day, any year in baseball and soccer. 

Mark W. Uhl 



OmOA FLAMBt^T MdndiV: OAtmbsr 11. ffpi / 7' 

gMerry Christmas 

students & Faculty 

Have a safe 
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646 w tennessee 222-6696 



8 / Monday, December 1978 FLORIDA F! AMRPAI ! 



Officials: Florida prisons don't work 



by dennis mufqueen 

flambf'au staff writer 

A major plank of Gov. -elect Bob 
Graham's campaign platform was a 
crackdown on crime. 

have been concerned that 
during the past several years there, 
has been le^ emphasis than needed 
m assuring that criauaals are 
prasecated and incarcehtfed as 
siiriftly as possible/' Graham told 
reporters hefyte the election. 

**The certainty of arrest and 
pfoseortioii «nd incatceralioQ of law 
breakers should be kkreased." 

If Graham expects such an 
approval to solve Florida's crnoe 
problem, he might be in for a rude 
awakming. 

The fMt is, Florida currei^ 
imprisons more people per capita 
than just about any other state, and 
yet it has the same — or a higher 
— crime rate tiian most. 

Crime statistics reveal Florida 
each year imprisons 100 more people 
per 100,000 than the national 
average and 200 more violent crimes 
per 100,000 people than the national 
average. 

Clearly, putting more people in 
prison won't help. An alternative? 
Nobodv seems to have one. 

**We're overusing our prisons," 
said Dr. Vernon Fox, professor of 
criminology at FSU. 

"What we're doing now just flatly 
doesn't make any sense," Fox said. 
Considered an expert in the field of 
corrections and the author of 
numerous books on the subject, Fox 
advocated a greater emphasis on 
probation and parole, rather than 
incarceration. 

In a book entitled Introduction to 
Corrections, Fox explains what he 
calls community-based correc- 
tions.'* 




KiiHHIIII 




The freezing cold which struck Tallahassee Saturda 
will begin to lift tonight and tomorrow, giving way to 
partly cloudy skies and a chance of rain before the 

weekend. 

Highs today will be in the 50s with an expected lou m 
the upper 30s tomorrow. Highs for the rest of the week 

will he 'n the 60s and lows in the 40s. 



The fortress-like Federal Correctional Institution three mUes east of 
Tallahassee, is one of Florida's many prisons which, according to 
authorities, are not solving crime problems. 



Rather than strictly a holding 
operation. Fox said the jail could be 
staffed with profes^onal personnd 
and become a community residential 
treatment center. 

It could be divided into units for 
group living experiments and 
provide diagnosis and identification 
of problems to be referred to other 
agencies. Short-term education and 
counseling should be more available. 

Fox said current trends in 
criminology are in this direction. 

Al Lee, public information officer 
for the department of corrections, 
said that comparisons with other 
states are not important. 

"We don't want to get involved 
with other states," Lee said. "Our 
job is to arrest and imprison 
people." 

"Unemployment is an important 
factor related to crime," he said. 
Florida has the tenth highest 
unemployment rate in the country, 
Lee said, and "the higher the 
unemployment, the higher the 
crime." 

In a report released by the Federal 
Bureau of Investigation in October,. 
1978, Florida had no less than seven 
cities listed among the top 25 in the 



rate of violent crime. 

New York City was t<^ with 1,339 
per 1,000, but Miami was a dose 
second with 1,065. The Lakeland- 
Winter Haven area was eighth with 
876; Orlando was ninth wiA S31; 
West Palm Beach-Boca Raton was 
13th with 785; Gainesville was 14th 
with 782; Daytona Beach was 19th 
with 756; and Tallahassee was 25th 
with711. 

California was the next closest 
state, with three cities in the top 25. 

While admitting that the present 
system is not working, Lee said the 
Department of Corrections encour- 
ages the courts to place more people 
on parole and probation, if it can be 
shown they pose no risk to society. 

It is interesting to note that 
Florida's ultra-conservative attitude 
toward imprisoning people extends 
to its use of the death penalty 
statute. 

Thirty-three states have the death 
penalty, but Florida prisons contain 
over one-fourth of all the country's 
Death Row inmates. 

More interesting is that in a 
regional study of Death Rows in 

turn to PRISONS, page 10 



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sale! top maker suede front 
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men s reg. 8.50 
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pajamas, now 

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adjustable waistband In several prints. 
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sale! men s 
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13.99 

Abserbcnl cotton terry fuN length rolie witti 
shawl collar, matching sask and roomy 
pockets. Sim $4lR:Xi. 



Men's Fumislmis 







WHERE THE GOOD ■ CHWSTAfVAS DUY5 ARE 



Farah"^ fashions 
cx>mfort in a full 
jean for the 
Iriature man 



Ni M treat. He looks erttt m Faun ' 
machine wasftaMe 100% Mytster 
gentlemen's leans. cut for the mature 

figure In a distinctnte 4 pocket 
western style that's perfect with 
sport shirts and sweaters A 
great holiday gift. 32 to 42 




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Men s Slacks 



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boys' slacks by 
Farah and oth^ 
famous makei:$ 

9^" 



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boys' KaynM ' dress 

shirts, reg. 6.50 



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Monday Pi<-'^<->'^^-.r>r " ^n'70 r' ^D»r> • n A^norf^,' 



Prisons 



from IMIQ98 



{ta, Texas, and Florida by the Southern Death 
Penalty Information Center in Durham, N.C., it was 
reported that more than 80 percent of the victims in capital 
punishment cases were white. But only one percent of the 
Death Row inmates in the sooth were whites convicted (3i 
crimes^ against blacks. 

The Florida Gearinghouse on Criminal Jostke sUted In 
its October newsletter that of 144 death sentences ordered 
under Florida's sti^nte. IMiunre bees for Hie killing of 
whites. 

**There*s no justification in niy mind for saying we're 
bemg unfair to the peof^ on Death Row/' sttd Rep. Bob 
Crawford, chahrperscm of the house criminal justice 
oommittec. 

*it may be that there are other people who should be 
there who are not — we just should be firmer with the 
people given life sentences," Crawford maintained. 

Crawford. D- Winter Haven, said there are built-in 
safeguards in the system to prevent prejudice. 

He pointed out the state's bi furcated trial system, 
whereby a person sentenced to death can have a decision 
overturned by appeal. If a jury sentences a person to life in 
prison, Crawford said, a judge cannot overrule the jury 
and sentence that person only to life. 

Additionally, Crawford said, the Cabinet sitting as the 
Executive Clemency Board can overturn a death penalty 
sentence. 

The only execution in the United States since 1967 took 
place in Utah on Jan. 17, 1977, when the state executed 
Gary Gilmore. Gilmore was convicted of murder and in a 
widely publicized ordeal, said he preferred death to life 
imprisonment. 

Florida, however, might be the next state to carry out 
the death penalty. Convicted murderer John Spenkelink is 
currently awaiting the outcome of his appeal to the U.S. 
Supreme Court. 

Spenkelink was convicted <rf the 1973 murder of a 
transient in a Tallahassee motel. 

Statistics obtained from the National Council on Crime 
and Delinquency reveal that Florida imprisons 237 people 
per 100,000 people. The national average is 136 per 
100.000. 

Latest statistics released by tiie Law Enforcement 
Assistance Administration indicate that Florida ranks at 
the top in the immber of violent crimes: 688.5 per 100,000 
for Florida as opposed to a national average of 481.5 per 
100,000. 

Violent crimes include mmdet, tape, robbery, and 
aggravated assault. 




John Spenkelink 

. . ,stoted to die first on Florida's Death Row 




224 E. College 222-5405 

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frith this coupon 
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health insurance coverage... call 

RAY BUNTON 222-0111 

WE APPRECIATE YOUR HEALTH INSURANCE BUSINESS 

Underwritten by Industrial Life Insurance Company, Dallas, Texas 



CONGRATULATIONS DEC. GRADUATES 




MEMBER FOXFIRE 



RESTAURANT GROUP 



Monday Night is Critic's Niglit 
all night long prinks 2 for 1 

in our lounge 

THUKSDAY— LADIES NIGHT 
$1.00 off ail Ladies drinks from 9:00 p.m. tftm closing 
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by eilffis brodciMfi 



or Friedman's job already making plans 



Who will replace Student Body President Neal Friedman? 
Though flc presidential race won't start for two months, 
rumors about possible candidates have begun circulating 
around campus. 

Friedman will be vacating his position after the SG 
presidential election in February. If Friedman lasts until 
then without being impeached, he will be the first FSU SG 
president to do so in the last five years. 

Some possible contenders in the upcoming political fracas 
can be found in the student senate. Senate President Randy 
Drew is rumored to be running on the Action party ticket 
with Panhellenic President Leanne Staples. With this 
alliance it would seem they could win most of the Greek 
votes on campus, but this may not be the case. 

The United Seminoles Party (USP) also seems to have 
Greek-oriented political hopefuls lined up for Hie 
presidential elections. The United Seminoles will attempt to 
maintain their control over FSU politics by sending Jerrod 
Levine, sectetary of communications in Friedman's cabinet, 
and running mate Gerald Johnson up against all poss%le 
competitors. 

Levine, a member of Alpha Epsilon Pi, and Johnson, a 
member of Alpha Sigma Alpha, may be able to steal some 
Greek votes from the Drew-Staples ticket because of their 
ties with these fraternities^. This g^p alte has the united 
support of the Black Student Union. 

Levine and Johnson presently have the su^K>rt of the 
USP administration and are planning to run on Friedman's 
United Seminote ticket. Rumor has it that they will be 
following the basic outlines already set down by the 
Friedman administration. 

Afiodier possible candidate is Senator Steve Jackson. He 
opted not to comment on whetiier or not he will be running, 
but did reveal that he has both considered running and has 



SENIORSII 

You have until Thursday 
to have your portrait 

included in FSU's 

"revived'' Yearbook. 

|Come by the informotion 
Lounge 2nd floor Union. 

Remember there's no 
sitting fee and this is 
the onlv chance to 
purchase the yearbook, 
so come early and 

avoid the rush. 



Mmu Dac 11 
Tims. Dsc 12 
Wed. Dec. 13 

Ihsp* 0§c* 14 



1I:3(M, 5:004:M 
8:30-1 :00, 2:00-5:30 
11:304:00, 5:0^4:00 
1:30-1:00, 2:00-5:30 

spoa$ored by AIX 



been considered as a running mate. Jackson declined to say 
who his running mates would be if he chooses to run 

As in any election, there are bound to be some last minute 
candidates. The few candidates listed here are the ones who 
^ . V . j| known around campus that they are pUnning 



to run for SG president and vice-pcesident. 

Any student wishiag to run for either position can 
in the student government office in the Union. The post of 
SG president is rather lucrative, for tiiose of you who are 



interested ia the monetary angle of the position. The SG 
president preiestly receives S80 a week for 4ft weelLS, or 

S3.840 a year. 

These elections wiU dedOe who wiQ lead FSU is poOlkal 
activities for the upcoming year, and the kipoftaace of tlie 
election cannot be stressed enoa^. The poMm of studeat 
body president is both prestigious and tine consurateg. But 
to many the honor of holding the post is wodli nqmed 
campaigning aad the hassles of the job. 

It is up to the studeaU of FSU to elect the candidates wito 
will best be able to serve them aad tke ualvmity fai tlie 
upoomfaig year. In order for this to happen, a much strmfer 
lam>out is needed than the 1.700 studeats who voted fai the 
senate electioBS held earier this fidl. 



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SMART SANTA'S SAVE 

AT SOUTHERN SUN!!! 



10% OFF 

ALL PLANTS!! 

(thru 12-1 5-78 ( 






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CHRISTMAS TREES 
GREAT GIFT IDEA! 




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Remember, .there are many kinds of 
houseplant hobby accessories that can be 
given for Christmas. Give pots, wicker 
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macramel We have got 'em all!! 

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Thefts may occur during finals 



Sec the guy pictured at right? He was 
caught by a Flambeau photographer 
leaving an unlocked and unattended dorm 
room with all sorts of material goodies to 
furnish his living room. 

But have no fear, he's just a facsimile of 
a burglar. 

On the other hand, his real life 
counterparts are on the lookout for a choice 
opportunity to steal this week. 

"Our major problem crime-wise during 
finals week time is with thefts," said FSU 
Police spokesperson Jim Sewell. 

** During studying and packing, students 
often leave their doors open and their 
belon^sgs sctttered all over. It makes for 
a lot of easy taiigets.'* 

S^ewell said a ''standard rip^rff' may 
occur when students are packing cars. A 
pocketbook or other item left unattended, 
even for a few minutes, is easy pickings for 
someone looking for cash. 

*'We recognized some security problems 
a few years ago in dorms and we cut down 
on a lot of outside traffic,** Sewell said, 
noting tfic incidence of dorm theft at FSU 
has gone down over the last two years. 

But dorm students can still fall prey to 
even the resident kleptomaniacs, so police 
suggest the following precautions to guard 
against theft: secure personal property. 




photo (by saNy tandutky 

and never leave cash and other valuables in 
plain view. 

Use locks on doors and cars, even when 
away from the room or car for a few 
minutes, and report suspicious persons to 
campus security. 



FSU student raped in Kellum 



An FSU student reported she was raped 
late Friday night in Kellum Hall. 

Acoor^Bg to Sgt. Jim Sewell, FSU Police 
spokesperson, the 18-year-old female was 
returslfig aromid midnight to her 
upper-story dorm room from a party hdd a 
few floors below. In the stairwell, she met a 
white male whom SeweO said accompamed 
her to faier dorm, forced himself inside, and 
allegedly raped the student. 



She was otherwise unharmed, and was 
taken to Tallahassee Memorial Regional 
Medical Center for standard examinations, 
Sewell said. The results of those 
examinations have not been released. 

It was the first such incident. Sewell 
added, to occur on campus since last 
January. The police had arrested no 
suspect in connectimi with the incident at 
7:30 last night. 



mPMN 

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CaU Days EvMms a INtkMrit 

CLASSES FORMING 
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Outside NY State 
CAU TOU FREE: iOO-223-17t2 

523 E. TENN. ST. 

TAUAHASSEE^U. 
32301 



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PARTS 
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LOOK GREAT THIS HOLIDAY 
SEASON WE DO JIT BEHER! ! 
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mClSION HAIRCUTS m MEN AND MUIMEN 

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HAVE A SAFE AND HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON! , ^ 





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If yop#m*t know what that special pe rso n wo uld Kke 

this holiday reason or don't have time toshop. . .buy a 
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yMf accottat. and we will matt the oertiflcaieairtfor 

yoo. 



14 / Morkiay. December 11, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



I, 




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Large (8 to 9) . . Extra Large (9 V2 to 1 0 Va) 



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sp(:yi^fc6"ATS 

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NORTH WOOD MALL 
DERWEAR NOT INCLUDED 




and 
BOYS 
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IHRISTMAS STOnOURS 
L TO 9 PJH., fPAYS 1 PJL TO 5:30 P Jl. 





DAY SEQ AUS 

cons • U6 • fUJIfl 



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turilrflf $17 



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% MASm amiYlSA, AMtUUM fXPtfSS 



FLOfllDA FLAMBEAU Monday. 



11. 197S / W 




rrom % 




Bedronks 

ife» Oar LanMMa Tkat J>rr>rt ^ oti Itrit 

GIMN6 VOU COMPUn mVKt AND MSTAIiATON 



THE 

HOUDAY 
LOOK 




Art 



V 



■ 



i 



V 



.2. 



»3 



Have you spotted that special pft you'd fike for Christmas? 

Come in and let Colony make 

your Christmas. 

NORTHWOOD MALL & TAL./m IASSEE MALL 
Colony Model: Vickie Pullen 



16 / Monday, December 11, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Crying 



from fMigo 1 

wasn't all right to cry anytime at all," she 
recalled. 'They kept saying 'You shouldn't 
bottie up tears, it's not healthy; you should 
express your emotions freely/ it got pretty 
sickening after a while.'* 

'After all, crying is not generally 
socially acceptable behavior in our society. 
People don't burst into tears all the time." 

'*So then I asked people *When do you 
cry?' and finally got some answers/* she 
said. 

The four factors she tried to code mto her 
questions were: public crying, as opposed 
to private; the importance of the event 
causing the tears; joy, as opposed to 
sorrow; an^ manq^ulatiim as a reason. 

**I learned that manipulation was the 
reason least acceptable to most people," 
she ^M, "You just don't cry to make 
others do what you want.** 

Yet, Hesselbart found that 44 percent of 
the people surveyed felt it was much more 
appropriate for women to cry when getting 
a traffic ticket, and 51 percent felt that was 
true for minor arguments with a date. 

**So what can I conclude from these 
answers? When can women cry?" 
Hesselbart asked. She answered herself: 
"They can cry when nobody should cry.** 

Hesselbart compared responses to the 
ten questions on crying with other factors 
such as age or opinions on various topics. 
Some of the comparisons were disqualified 
as unrealiable (statistical methods showed 
the relationships were not pronounced 
enough to be more than possible 
coincidence), but here are a few of her 
findings: 

•More whites than blacks believe it is 
acceptable for both men and women to cry 
in most of the situati<ms examined. 

•Younger people were generally more 
tolerant of tears at any time than older 
ones, as were those with higher levels of 
education and those who claimed liberal 
political beliefs. 

•More women dian m«i believe it is 
acceptable for either sex to cry at a sunset 
or at the birth of a granddiild. 

•Those who agree that Army lifer has a 
good influence on young men thmk crying 
is more suitable far women than men on 
almost any occasion An tiiose who 
^sagree. 

•FtofSt said tbiey wouldn't feel 
rawomiortable around a man who wore 
makeup (less than ODe-fourth of tiie 
^Mttple) tended to re^xmd ^t crying was 
equaOy okay for bodi sexes than those 
made nervous by men with mascara. 
^ Hes selbart, 32, who cafls herself 'not a 
feminist sociologist, but a feminist and a 
sociologist,*' has had students survey local 
pnblic opii^ cadi year for the last three 
years. 

Siie moved to Tallahassee in 1973 after 
earning a doctoral degree in sociology from 
Ae University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. 
Within two years she was intrigued enough 
by the local situation to organize the kind of 
social poll she had specialized in making. 

Called Project TAL. the survey this year 
sampled the opinions of 415 area adults 
aged 18 through 70 selected at random 
from the Polk City Directory. From fall of 
1977 through spring of this year, students 
mostly from FSU sociology classes asked a 
selected list of questions in interviews, of 
•bout 35 minutes each. Of 500 names 
originally chosen, some were disqualified, 
such as businesses or dormitories, and an 
additional 9 percent refused to be 
Interviewed, leaving 415. 




Susan He^Ibart 

The sample weas about 80 percent 
white, Hesselbart reported, and about half 
were married. About 30 percent were 
single, 6 percent were widowed, and about 
one respondent in seven was divorced or 
separated at the time of the survey. The 
group included 179 men and 236 women, 
and the average age was 36 years. One half 
of those questioned had lived in 
Tallahassee at least seven years. 

Crying was only one topic investigated in 
the survey. Other concepts included 
homosexuality, housework and general sex 
roles. 

Hesselbart concluded from other survey 
questions that having a happy family life is 
more important than success at a job to 
both men and women. 

Sixty percent chose "a happy family 
life" as their most important personal 
concern, ahead of a meaningful philosophy 
of life, success at a job. helping other 
people, and a high income, in order itf 
preference. ~ 

Both men and women rated family 
higher than work, with 60 percent of men 
and 61 percent of women pinpointing it as 
their key concern. 

*Tm not surfmsed,** said Hesselbart. 
"it's perfectly congruent with most data 
collected over the last 30 years. I am 
convinced that the only reason those 
survey da^ have been ignored is diat those 
people (surveyors) were wearing bUnd- 
ers. 

Many slanted their questions as well, 
she said. 

"Most questions assume homemaking is 
the proper role for women," she explained, 
"hi one classic example, respondents were 
asked, *Do you feel it's okay for a married 
woman with school-age children to go to 
work if her husband can afford to support 
her anyway?' That's really stacking the 
deck." 

So Hesselbart, in her last survey, also 
decided to try switching the roles. She had 
the student polltakers ask half of those 
questioned traditional queries she 
considers sexist. The other half were asked 
the same questions, but with the roles 
reversed. 

For instance, she copied the item 
"Working mothers often ignore their 
children" from earlier surveys. About 46 
percent of Tallahasseeans agreed that the 
statement was true, concurring with earlier 
results by others, according to Hesselbart. 
But the other half were asked if it were true 
that working fathers often neglect their 
children. More than 62 percent agreed. 

Other results from her i o ia *rov er aa l 
questions: 

•Though about 59 percent of local adidts 
surveyed agree that the major f«a|MiiitiUK- 
of the wife is to keep Iwr hoabaad aad 




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18 



Monday, December 11, 1978 FLORIDA F 



I * » ^ D r 



AU 




1 



Merger from 



educatkm at FAMU and FSU by the BOK, 
architecture, pharmacy and nursing 
programs are also bcmg examined for 
duplication. 

The transfer of programs in business 
education and industrial education from 
FSU to FAMU earlier this year was ordered 
by the BOR as part of the process of 

eliminating dupiicatioQ as mandated by. 

HEW. 

"We're still in the negotiation stage with 
HEW," Auzenne, who heads the BOR task 
force of dupliotion ni programs, said last 
week. 

That task lofce is '^looking at any 
pragfim with a common name that might 
represent duplication," said BOR Chancel- 
lor E.T. York, who added, "We doa't 
believe that those programs (In business 
and education) tcproieiit nnncccaiay 
^hi^ication/' 

York dmed any transfer or merger w^ in 
the offing between FAMU and FSU in 
business or education. "The Treats would 
have to make that judgement," said Yofk, 
not HEW. 

Paula Cooper, an c^fidal with Hie 
post-secondary education division of the 
HEW Office of CivU Rights in Washington, 
also said reports of a transfer of programs 
were "to my knowledge, untrue." She did, 
however, confirm that "the only component 
of the Florida plan (for desegregation) we 
have not accepted is the duplicaton study." 

Neither York or Auzenne would say when 
that study was due for submission to 



President Sliger 

. . .denies stones of merger 



HEW. York said it would be at least another 
month befoK the duplication study is 



One souroe in the Sdiool of Business said 
a number of business faculty members 
ahfsady were preparing resumes to sett 
employment elsewhere if tiie reports of a 
transfer are verified. 

Business Dean Ray Solomon, however, 
scoffed at the suggestion. 

•*I would discount as totally erroneous 
that any resumes are out," Solomon said. 
"I think it's too quick for much of that thing 
to happen." 

Academic Affairs Vice President Lawton 
said Friday Sliger plans to meet with 
education administrators today to assure 
them that rumors of a transfer to Florida A 
& M University are unfounded. 



Crying from page 16 

children happy, more than two-thirds 
accepted the reversed question about 

husbands. 

•About 60 percent answered that it was 
true that one of the most important things a 
mother can do for her daughter is prepare 
her for the duties of being a wife. But 70 
percent said the same logic applied to a 
father preparing his son for a family role. 

•Only one question showed results 
upholding the traditional male-female 
roles, Hesse Ibart said. When asked the 
statement "In marriage, the husband 
should make the major decisions," 
one-third agreed. Only six percent of those 
asked if a wife should make the b^ 
decisions in marriage agreed. 

''What these data are saying to me is 
that men and women are a lot more alike 



than different in what thev want out of 
life," Hesselbart said. "The k^y issue of 
difference is equality." 

And on that issue, she said the data 
could be deceptive. Men tend to support 
equality more than women on an abstract 
level, according to Hesselbart, but women 
want more day-to-day sharing of household 
tasks. 

She illustrated her point with figures. 
Her survey this year showed 77 percent of 
males questioned favored passage of the 
Equal Rights Amendment, as compared to 
62 percent of women. 

"But on housework, guess who felt who 
should do what?" she asked. About 44 
percent of men concurred with a statement 
that "In general, men should leave the 
housework to women." Fewer than 30 
percent of the women agreed. 



Bxiie No More 

"A life in Poems" 



by Tom JUhmM 
Avmkbk of AiTs Mstora 





FRESH CRACKBI BACK OYSTBIS 

32 GLPrrCNBI DRAFT BEER 

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NEXT TO COURTESY OiOS 
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known purveyors of the blues seen in the company ol 
Fat Ramsey, harmonica player for Johnny Winter & Trudys 

Manl: an evening of Qdrane pleasure IM 

Tallahassee's finest blues band 

iwn io hang oti at 

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thin 110. 

O Copyright 1978 




3EAU 




Merry Christmas 
from the news staff 



e Flambeau 



. . . from hft to rif^ Dmmm Mulqumn, Km 
Lewandoski, Susan Wal^r, CMs Brocknmn, 
Robert O'Lary, Jeff Mengum, Beifi fU^kmeke, 
Darmi Vogt Jim Cok Ste¥e WaHdr^ St»¥9 DoKrn, 
HowardUtim, HehnFebmg, Sa§y SarHkmky, Skkmf 
Bedmg0ak/, and Joyce Harper, 



ptKilo by 



If you stay, they'll be open 



by susan waller 

flambMif wr{ t«r 

The holiday season is finally here with 
the end of classes for students and special 
changes for employees of businesses and 
banks. 

FSU will close down all facilities and 
dorms this Friday until Wednesday, Jan. 3, 
when winter quarter reigistrat^on begins 
and dorms re-open. 

Strozier library will be open during break 
Monday-Saturday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., 
but Christmas weekend (Dec. 23-25) and 
New Year's weekend (Dec. 30-Jan. 1) the 
library will be closed. The library will 
re-open on a regular basis Jan. 4 when 
classes begin. 

Hanakkah begins on Deer. 24, which 
means this holiday season will be a special 
one for Claistians and Jews alike. 

Since Christmas Day and New Year's 
Day both fall on Mondays, state employees 
win get two tfafee-day weekends. Baoks 
wiH be open for regular business hours on 
the Fridays before Christmas and New 



the 



Year's, but will be closed on 
Satuardays prior to the holidays. 

For last minute shoppers, most stores 
will be open util 5 p.m. on Sunday the 24th 
and also on New Year's Eve day. All stores 
will be closed Christmas Day, but some 
grocery stores will be open on New Year's 
Day. 

U.S. Post Offices will be closed on the 
two holidays, and mail will not be delivered 
on either Christmas Day or New Year's. Be 
sure to get your holiday mail out soon, 
because the post office is already swamped 
with cards and packages, a postal 
employee says-. 

Football fans will have a good selection 
of games to watch with four bowl games on 
New Year's. The Sugta Bowl wiH be played 
on New Year's Eve, while the Orange 
Bowl, the Cotton Bowl and the Rose Bowl 
all will be played New Year's Day. 

Have a very good holiday vacation and 
we at Jiiie Flambeau hope to see you again 
(and hope you'll see us again) Jan. 4. 



One Stop For Your 
CHRISTMAS NEEDS 

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Tallahassee, Florida 32301 

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^ Dn-ember '''' 1978 ^' 



1-1 



Rev. Jones' ministry filled ghetto needs 



toy f g i nak i wMjfon 



BfJ mm ikm Aagete I>avls trlai, aad Hie 
Fwrtiwr ii • Biadi Ou on the Bjadt Pmnthcr 
FMty, !• • veteran observer of Mack 
politics.) 

(PNS) We know how they died from a 
mixture of cyanide, deranged leadership, 
automatic gunfire, jungle isolation, 
unrealized idealistic goals and the fear of 
enemies both real and imagined. 

The question is why they died. Why did 
over 900 people, most of them black and 
many of them elderly, follow a white 
minister into an isolated rain forest and 
then to eternity? 

The answer, or at least a piece of it, must 
lie back in the San Francisco ghetto into 
w hich Jim Jones moved his church nearly a 
decade ago. His arrival coincided with the 
last embers of the incendiary riots that had 
swept through black communities from 
New York to Watts. The Kerner 
Commission had just warned that 
American society was becoming two 
nations, one white and affluent and the 
other black and poor. 

The civil tights battles had been fought, 
and the spoils were being divided op, 
mostly by those who bore little or no 
kinship to the blacks in whose name the 
struggle had been waged. 

The two most vital responses to racism, 
the Black Panther Party and the Nation of 
Islam, were also undergoing internal 
changes which would render them 
Incapable of maintaining the political and 
monX leadership they had once exerted. 

These two organizations, one political 
imd one religions, symbolized in their own 
^ledlne tiie fact that botii the black church 
and bladL politics were caught in a 



nothing more tiian soiae mtfanate pastoral 
concern, he offered his hands and became 
known as a faith healer. And to the extent 
that he gave them renewed faith, he was a 
healer. 

For the young, he offered spiritual social 

and political activism, and concrete 
programs of community survival — 
medical clinics, food programs, day care. 
He used his pulpit as a tonim for social 
issues. In doing so, Jones was in harmony 
with only one other church in San 
Francisco. That was Glide Memorial 
Church, composed, ironically, of a largely 
white congregation led by the Rev. Cecil 
Williams, a black minister. 

Rev. Jones' anti-racist, pro-socialist, 
community-oriented church program 
endeared him to a congregation which had 
been deprived of the promise once 
advanced by the civil rights movement and 
robbed of the excitement of the vision of 
revolution that had evaporated in the years 
between the assassination of Malcolm X, 
the murder of King, and the bullet-ridden 
suppression and internal subversion of the 
Black Panther Party. 

In the process he made enemies, some of 
whom were in the black community. Black 
ministers, some with half-filled churches, 
condemned Jones and claimed that he was 
using trickery to attract the loyalty of 
blacks who had once attended their 
churches. But it was Jones* church which 
celebrated African Liberation Day, Jones* 
congregation that was given purpose in 
socially rewarding activity, Jones* 
parishioners who were extorted to carry on 
the revolutionary traditions of King, and 
tiot his black minister detractors. 

Jones was on the move politically, and 
his growing congregation moved with him. 

Jones was rewarded with the 




paralyzing identity crisis. 

Indeed, the black churches in San 
Francisco s Western Addition, where 
Jones set up his ministry, were already 
moving away from the spark of militancy 
which ignited some of their actions when 
they were part of the movement that 
produced and supported Rev. Martin 
Luther King. 

The view from the back of the Temple 
was a wasteland created by the wrecking 
ball and enclosed by a cyclone fence. It was 
inhabited by drug addicts, their street-wise 
supplier^, and the lonely old people who 
hung out in a nearby nku-pait — a 
Redevelopment Agency gesture to 
community beautlfication in the heart of 
devastation. 

Jones* ministry was an wstuH smcen. 
To the old people, many of whom needed 



chairmanship of the San Francisco Housing 
Authority, a position which previously had 
been held by a black minister whose church 
was located just around the comer from 
People's Temple. 

But with this power came the inevitable 
hostility. Traditional black ministers 
shunned Jones and exhorted their 
congregations to v(rte against those 
candidates Jones supported. The resulting 
isolatkm of the People's Temple in the 
black community was hei^tened by 
physical and mental assaults on the 
congregation. Temple vehicles were set 
afire, the church was tiiebonibed and 
members were shot at. There were 
threatening phone calls, intimidating 
letters and attempted lurson. 

The congicgntoi began toivithdraw into 
itself, into a world in which Jones and his 



followers were lncreasii\gly unable to 
distinguish between legitimate criticism 
and Blogtcal hostility. 

Cracks began to appear In what had 
seemed to be a s6lld front, indivklttals 
resigned, stories of disciplinary beatings 
Increased, and tte local media became 
curious. 

The temple congregation continued 
to shrink, becoming more closed off to the 
world which Jones sought to reform, bi the 
quest for security, in the fiitile efforts to 
cover the cracks in its facade, the temple 



barred its doors against the 
brotherhood and the faith in the fotirc 
which it preached. 

Approximately 1,200 of the conuu ^atjon 
retreated finally to Guvana. Before 
leaving. Jones said from his pulp ?, "\ 
know there ate people in the audience wIk) 
would like to see us destroyed.'* He 
predicted that People's Temple wookl 
prevail over its enemies. 

Today, 912 Moated corpses are the 
legacy of Jones* vision. 



DO n 

NATURAUY 




HAIR CUTTING 'The Way You Want It 

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Behind the Tennessee St. Subway 






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Panama City and Bristol 





Art; 

Sha 

fro 



Revie' 



Ravi ShaiJ 
was warm! 

au(Jicnrr S 

in the Oi , 
A dc set- 
traditions ( 
2.500 vran 
oriental ni 
virtuos»> tal 
Rakha ami I 
Mullick. I 
traditional 
chief fa^^ 
mastercrattl 
ornately co( 
In the fir 
Shankar ul 
Indian tec 
order to (i 
sorrow. Or 
unheard v(| 
left to die. 

In the sel 
picked up ai 
beginning 
Thfoughoul 
in genera! 



ontheorigj 
imagine %\\ 
or cylce oi 
melody tt> 

he dove a^| 
raga thf 
between \ 
leaping 



FLORiDA FLAMBEAU Mondiy. December 11. 1978 / 2! 



hth iiixtl 



the congregation 
'Uyana. Before 
|m his pulpit, "i 
the audience who 
destroyed." He 
I empie would 



corpses are the 



IT 



JIY 



cis;You Want It' 

|22 0889 
St. Subway 



•ngs 
dable. 

ight.) 

1979. 




atures 




Shankar took audience full circ] 
from depth of sorrow to cosmic 



Review 



by larry schuster 

flambeau writer 

Ravi Shankar, world renown sitar player, 
was warmly received by an overflowing 
audience Saturday night at the first concert 
in the Opperman Music Hall Series. 

A descendent of the aural classical 
traditions of India dating back more than 
2.500 years, Ravi Shankar shared the 
oriental rug from which he played with 
virtuoso tabla (hand drum) player Alia 
Rakha and his tamboura player, Nodu 
Mullick. Though Mullick provided the 
traditional iMu^gfotwd string droning, his 
chief fame conies from being a. sitar 
mastercrafisman and nu^er of l^iaiduv's 
ornately constructed instrument. 

la ^e first raga, or melody framework, 
Shankar used to great advantage the 
Indian technique of bending notes in 
order to produce his desired effect of 
sorrow. One was able to hear so many 
unheard voices begging, so many dreams 
left to die. 

In the second part of this raga, the pace 
picked up as the pain and frustration of the 
beginning seemed to be cleansed. 
Throughout this raga and in Indian music 
in general the intensity of the music 
increased with improvisation and variation 
on the original melody structure. One could 
imagine Shankar as finishing one variation 
or cylce only to dive back again into the 
melody to discover new possibilities. And 
he dove again and again. By the end of the 
raga the intense musical interplay 
between the three suggested twirling and 
leaping bodihisatvas. accelerating to a 




AUa Rahka €uid Ravi Shankar 



breathless pitch. 

Next, Rakha demonstrated his virtuosity 
on the tabla. His jolly, rockirig personality 
and intricate finger popping won everyone 
over, as Shankar chopped out the beat 
pattern — the talla — three beats, two 
beats, and twa beats. All in one cycle, it 
was truly a rocking party. Syncopation. 
Variation. We were all with him all the 
way. Every soul was in his hands. 

Indian music traditionally has no inter- 
missions. Thus, the program flowed into 
the next raga. After an hour and a half the 
audience seemed to remain intimately tied 
to the spirit of the program and the 
intermission wasn't missed. Due to the 
intense concentration and seriousness with 
which the trio approached their music the 

turn to SHANKAH gmge 23 




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ATHLETE'S FEETIII 



...and that place is Buddy's Sporting 
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ef shoes for any athlete. 

NUce, Converse, and Spotbit are only a 
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It makes no difference what sport you 
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MONROE 



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22 / Monday December 11, 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 






s 



o 
a 



The Flying Burrito Brothers 



. . . in Ruby Diamond Auditorium Saturday night 



Burritos came pickin' and grinnin' 



Review 



byaiiWdoltaMr 

Wnqipiag up a 14-day to«r of tiie loiitiieast, tiie|R|yiBg 
Borrito Brott ic fs came In ftir a landtng at Ruby DiamoDd 
Aaditoriam Saturday night to play some hot 
hlBegraia<-ooiintfy rock and pfowe tfiat alter all jihese yeafs, 
they're fttill atoond and ci^Me of kicking it loose. 

Only about 1,000 students showi^ op for the free LPO 
poformaace, whidi had some heavy oompetitkm in the 
fotms of Bavi Siuudnr, two theatte productions and 
iqxx>ming fmals. Thoae who came however, didn't look 
disappointed, as ^ entire crowd frequently joined in tiie 
hi^-flying spirit oX. tiie nmsic — ston^in' tiieir feet 
clappin' their hands. 

Tallahassee might as well have been Austin, as the 
group — only pedal steel stylist Sneaky Pete Kleinow 
remains from the original band — lit into some fine 
country sounds which merged the mellowness of LA with 
pure mountain music. Cajun fiddles and Texas pedal steel. 

The show included old Burritos favorites, like Gram 
Parsons ' 'Wheels, " bluegrass traditionals like **Six Days 
on the Road," "Truck Drivin' Man," and *'Orange 
Blossom Special," and even some fine Cajun fiddlin' from 
Gib Giblow with "Diggy Diggy High, Diggy Diggy Low" 
and "Louisiana Man." 

Sneaky Pete, widely respected as one of the world's best 
pedal-steel players, had some trouble with his instrument 
at the start of the show, but soon seemed to have it in 
working order to add energetic licks to the 
fiddle-country-twang arrangements. 

Most interesting was an instrument jam during "Six 
Days on the Road" when guitarist Greg Harris traded 
some Hendrix-like riffs with Sneaky Pete, who sounded 
like he was playing an organ instead of steel guitar. Pete 



also got some great locomotive effects in a 12-minute 
fiddle-propelled jam on ''Orange Blossom Special." 
Sneaky provided tfie push, whUe GMyw aaiMfris ifaided 
on fiddles on the blaang finale. 

The Bmitos, of course wero a major influence on 
Am^ican music, knifing parts of thdr sovnd lo l^emlaiy 
groups like Buffilo Springfield, the ^rrds, Conmfnder 
Cody, and tImHigh Gram Parsons, KeMi Sidiaid and tiie 
Rdhng Stones. 

The group has continued to evolve throu^ the years, 
adding new mcmhers md hew scmgs hot still doing some 
of Parsons' songs "to keep the name authentic," 
according to Sneaky Pete. 

Speaking in a brief interview before ^ show, the man 
whose work has enlivened albums by Linda Sonstadt, 
Jackson Browne, tiie Burritos and numerous other 
LA^oomrtry influenced artists said he was looking forward 
to going home and finishing up his own project — mixing 
tapes for a forthcoming solo album. 

"We're flying back to LA tomorrow and take alittle rest 
before going out again," he said. The Burritos begin a 
European tour early next year, as well as extensive playing 
in the South and Midwest, he added. 

It was only the second time the group had appeared in 
Florida, but they'd "like to come down here a lot more 
often" though Sneaky Pete said he preferred sticking to 
California as a more laid-back atmosphere for writing and 
performing. 

"I've been on the road for 15 years now, and it just 
abou^ balances out. But I think I'd like to concentrate more 
on recording right now." Pete said. 

Though the band had spent 14 days on this tour and 
looked ready for a rest, the performance was enthusiastic. 
Hell, it downright made you wish it was late April at 
Miller's Landing. Far from being burnt-out, the Burritos 
are just re-making themselves known in these southern 
parts. Hopefully, you won't have to go cruisin'Lukenback, 
Austin or LA to catch them again. 




UUCXHCS 



HO HO HO 
Chrtetnas IHwiar Party 



ISC4 



o H«U4a> t«ckiall 

eCrkrlMHia»i MiiMir frM 

hy Cli« IMMMTI 



o StraUlag 



rels .Maalas rra4lll«uil C 



o Ja y — liata MMtic 



e Special CkrtatMa Sift 

Decmlier 1S,I9^« at %M pom. 



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Cheap Thrills 



The International Students Association 
will sponsor a year-end get-together on 
Friday. Dec. 15, at 6 p.m. in the 
International House. 916 W. Park Ave. At 
the event students will meet the incoming 
Executive Council, bid farewell to those 
leaving FSU, and meet faculty and 
administration interested in international 
students. 

Bring a plate of snacks, if possible, and 
come in your native dress as far as 
possible. 

* * * 

A free rebirthing seminar will be led by 
Jim Turcot and Mark Greenfield on 
Tuesday. Dec. 12. at 8 p.m. at The 
Taproot. 631 W. Tennessee. The seminar 
wUl give an introduction to rebirthipig and 



is beneficial for those undergoing or 

considering the experience. 

a • * 

The Seeds of Universal Light will present 

a Christmas benefit on Tuesday, Dec. 12, 

at 9 p.m. at Tommy's. Special guests will 

be Velma Frye. Charles and Gil, Santa 

Claus, and others. There will also be 

comedy skits. Admission is $2. 

a * a 

The Leon County Public Library will 
sponsor an American sign language class 
for beginners on Wednesday. Dec. 13, 
from 3-4 p.m. The class will be held in the 
children's storyhour room at the library. 
Pre-registration is required, since class 
size is limited to 25. CaU 467-2665 for more 
information. 



Sot.'al For 



FSU Students! 




Rf«e Front Page T-SNrt 
with $10 Purchase. \Ate 
carry paperbacks, greet- 
ing cards, posters. n<^e 
cards. bufkHtn boards, 
appointment diacies. sta- 
tionery and much, much 
morel ..i-w 



Timberlane Shops on the Square 
Mon.-Sat. 10-9/Sun 10-6 385-4046 




arty 



Tip 



e T-Shirt 
se We 
ks, greet- 
rs, note 
oards, 
rjes. sta- 
. much 



h 



Square 
385-4046 




Shankar 



ffom 



21 



fcv\ position-changing resffess souls in tlie aadteoce 

caught a severe eye from the drummer. 

With the next melody, an evening raga — a romantic 
mrlodv — the music suggested through its syncopation 
and irregular beat patterns, a heightened sense of joy. 

Leaning into his tabla and nodding his head, the 
drummer seemed to communicate to Siumkar, yes, rm 
with you. We are you. 

Shankar released a grateful smile and took us all home. 
An intense evening of eyhUaration and reiaaie, of diviag 
and searching. 

. . . but it is a comatant search to re&ck aometkmg tkm I can 
see and feel but never hold onto. Music in ike only 
language I really kaowfor J beUem oi Nads Plana* the 

sound is God, " . 

— .Shankar, from his laga album 

on the defunct Apple label. 
♦ ♦ ♦ 

A batik work showing the portrait of Savi Shmkiff with 
sitar in hand, done by the artist Sanjit Datta (assistam art 
director, WFSU-TV) was presented to Shankar at ^ end 
of his coooeit on bdiatf of the India Association. Gifts win 
also be preaeated to Iddm and Muffldt on behalf of the 
India Association. 




FLORIDA Ff AMRFAf I Mnnrliv HprpmbPr t1 197R / 23 



MGFIC 
RCSIAURANT 

1990 W. Fmmf^ St. 
575-0222. 5754M3 

.Opeo 1 1 a.m.-IO p.m. M-F 
5p.m.-10p.m. 
ClOMdSun. 



♦ 



Ravi Shankar 



Reed's double live album 
explores the artist's world 




or 

Smiley 
reviews 



Take No Prisoners; Lou Reed; Arista 

Records 

Lou Reed, like Sid Vicious, makes a career 
out of being an asshole. But while Vicious 
sinks into kinky headlines, the veteran 
scum keeps telling us his agony with such 
relevance we gotta listen. 

Take No Prisoners is a classic because 
Lou explains his world like never before. 
This double live album, recorded at the 
Bottom Line in NYC May 17-21, is more 
than an updated version of the 1974 Rock 
and Roll Animal. 

The three Parnassus-bound guitars that 
made the intro to "Sweet Jane" drive 01' 
Smiley delerious are gone, replaced with 
an informal band-beer-blur comeraderie. 

The baneful language, however 
verboden, is pure Lou. From jibes at Patti 
Smith to the real story behind smash (and 
only) hit "Take a Walk on the WUd Side,'* 

all his anteoodotes are bo^ interestiiig and 
boring. 




Lou Reed 

Songs on Take No Frisoners stretch 
across his post-Velvet Underground works, 
including the title track and "I Wanna Be 
Black" from Street Hassle, his best album 

since 1973*s Bertin. 
Lou has had trouble with commercial 

success because he's so arrogant and 
bullheaded and can't follow any set 
formula, as Metal Machine Music showed. 
But anybody into Lou Reed will 
eventually have to buy Take No Prisoners. 

And since it's almost Christmas, you 
burnouts with a little green left might want 
to buy yourself a gift. Or, if you're 
generous, you can even give it to someone 
who really needs it. In fact, I'm sending a 
copy to Ellen Templeton: Merry Christmas 
from or Smiley. 



Former Beatle manager must go to court 



(ZNS) Former Beatles Manager Allen 
Klein is scheduled to stand trial February 
5 on charges of income tax evasion. 

Klein had appealed lo the US Supreme 
Court seeking to have the charges 
dismissed on the grounds that he is being 
subjected to double jeopardy since his first 
trial ended with a deadlocked jury. 

However, the high court refused to hear 



Klein's appeal dearing the way for a 

second trial. 

Klein is aOeged to have failed to pay 
taxes on $125,000 that he earned during 
the years 1970. 1971 and 1972. He 
reportedly made Ac moacy hi qpiestion 
through the sale of ptomotioiial copies of 
the album, A Concert For Bangladesh, 






LUNCHEON 
SPECIALS 



MON - SWEET & SOUR PORK & FRIED RICE 

TUES - MOO GOO GAI PAN & FRIED RICE 

WED - SHRIMP FRIED RICE £r CHICKEN 

WINGS 

THURS - PEPPER STEAK & FRIED RICE 
FRI - SHRIMP FRIED RICE B EGG ROLL 
SAT - SHRIMP FRIED RICE & 2 DRUMSTICKS 



Westwood 

P' 




PADRC 

REST. 



Bndo0 



Campbell f\ 
Stadium W 



(Q oiaoium 
u 
O 

We'll be open this Saturday at 4 p.m.. Come by 
^tckc tlie 98m9iHMl Saturday's spedtl^ 



X-MAS SPECIAL 

From now until 
Christmas - Get 
oIREE 
installation 

with the purchase 

of any unit or 

system 



Panasonic's nriatched 
component system is 
probably the best known 
of all the new systems. It 
is a high power, high 
C|iiality, attractive system 
that would work weH in 
almost any car or van. You 
have to hear it to beKave 
the sound. 



Pioneer 
Conrad 

Craig 



Kriliet 
Jensen 



STERE 



lOlt N. MONROE sr. 



2I1-2IM 



24 / Monday, December 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 



Early finishers can go see Dylan 



Bob Dylan, the niaa who married a loctalfy c oa t d o t 
inaUaa-style verw to Americaa mBsk and then 
toned aromid aad plugged Ids new creatkm into an amp 
and who became oae of rock's fbiemost stars as a resah, 
will play In the JadoonviBe Cofisenm Wednesday night 

Havn^ seen one off Dylan's concerts is no reason to miss 
this one. His show is anything but repetitious as he 
oontimioosly makes new arrangements of his most funous 
songs (**Like a Rolling Stone," "Lay Ladj Lay," etc.) and 
incessantly reworks his concert format. He has also been 
known to sing entirely new lyrics to familiar tunes and at 
other times to alter significant words and phrases. 

Furthermore, reports of Dylan's current 70-city tour 
indicate that the singer/ songwriter has become more of a 
performer, that the unapproachable idol is becoming more 
approachable, is interacting with audiences more than he 
has since his early days in the clubs of New York. 

The concert will mark the first. appearance of Bob Dylan 

in Jacksonville since 1965. 

• • • 

Ticltets for the show are $10, $8.56 and $7. AD seats are 
reserved. Tickets are avaUable In Jacksonville at: 
Coliseum Box Office, Civic Auditorium Box Office, 
Regency Square Ticket Office, Sears, Bndgot Tapes and 

Rerords and the Music Shop. 



iobCVrtbO End of year party 
Sun. Music at 1 1 til 4, new hours 
_ SAT. 12 5 a.m. Dec. 29 & 30 

stime Downstoirs BYOB 




Bob Dylan 



. . . will make his first Jacksonville appearance since 
1965 



T EAT ALONE 
ON 

CHRISTMAS DAY ! 

I The meal will be served at Trinity 
Methodist Churdi 120 W. Park 
Ave. Tallahawee, FL 

11:00 AM -2:00 PM 




packages: uiua 

I logo aesigns. technical renderings. 
I cartoons/charicatures, catalogs. m< 




Francisco Franco, 
Deceased: 
**1 oonMn't get a foot past 
St. Peter*sGito without my 

Mediatjrpe resume/' 



FREE 



FREE 




HAPPY 
CHANUKAH 

from 



Westwood Shopping Center 
576-2196 Open 7 days 




REGENCY PARK 



1 Bechm. Fum. 
Pool, Laundry Rm. 
Popular Complex 
1817 W. Call 



1$ 




Return to the Popular CfasBics 

A. Alan Pahi 100% shetiand wool crew neck 
sweater — $30. 

B. Izod's 100% Acrylic links cardigan. The 
classic "alligator'^ sweater in whiti, navy, brown, 
red, biege . 7. $24 

C. Allen Paine 100% lambs wool full fashioned 
/ V-neck sweater in navy camel, rpst. 




1 



(I 



Downtown 

Monday & Thursdays 9:30-8:00 
Tues,, Wed., Fri. & Sat 9:30-6:00 



TaMuttsee MaN 
Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-10 prr^ 
Sunday 1 p.m.-6 p m. 



2 

a 





Ra 



The Flori 
champtonsh 

TV. 

These t>* 
hy the RattI 
rally in J« 

victory in t 

In the 
Massachu 
Reno 44- 21 
game to he 
8-4 on the 
one beli>r«. 

FAMl^ St 
in the tlrs 
Drivine 4" 
plunged in 
on the exti 
from ifuhe 

l hree pT 
pouneecl oi 
State 30. : 
position f(v 
Vincent ( 
proved i 
attcrnoon 

Jackson 
second hal 
of the ball 
down until 

Unveilin 
1,000-yard 
Tigers dro 
last six. Tl 
9:36 left in 
threaten t 
zone each 

Later in 
where it r< 
four befor 
settle for 



Se 
Ga 



Murray 
scored 20 
Tony Jack 

The un' 
team pus 
games wtt 
Gators i 
Saturday 

The 6-0 
percent tr( 
with 13 p< 
generally t 
Scminoles 

The Se 
bench su| 
Pernell T< 
most ot tl 
close in if 

The gan 
dead tor r 
leading th 

Fsr sh 

iihished w 
fell tro rr 
4H pcreen 



f LORIOA FLAMBtAU Monday/ DedWWtar If; ItH / 34 




Rattlers face U Mass for title 



The Florida A&M Rattlers w ill compete for the national 
championship in Division 1-AA next Saturday (m natkmal 
TV. 

These two precedent setting events were made possible 
by the Rattlers' ability to fight off a furious Jackson State 
rally in Jackson, Miss.. Saturday to preserve a 15-10 
victory in the Division 1 - A A semi-final playoff match-up. 

In the other semi-fmal game, the University of 
Massachusetts routed favored University of Nevada- 
Reno 44-21, thus gaining a spot opposite FAMU in the title 
game to be (^ayed in Wichita Tex. Massachusetts is 
8-4 on the season while Nevada-Reno was ranked number 
one before recording its first loss Saturday. 

FAMU started out scoring and scored two touchdowns 
in the first quarter against a befoddled Tiger team. 
Driving 47 yards in 13 plays, fullback Michael Soloman 
plunged in from the one, and Jackson State's two penalties 
on the extra point attempt allowed Solomon to cruise in 
from inches away for the two-point conversion. 

Three plays later FAMU defensive stand-out Joe Yates 
pounced on an errant Tony Harris pitchout at the Jackson 
State 30, and from there it took only six plays to get in 
position for Soloman to do his thing again from the one. 
Vincent Coleman's point after made it 15-0 FAMU, and 
proved to be the last points the Rattlers could get all 
afternoon . 

Jackson State reversed the order of domination in the 
secQnd half, taking control of the ball game on both sides 
of the ball. In fact, FAMU didn't get a second half first 
down until the last two minutes of the game. 

Unveiling their highly-touted running game featuring 
1 , 000-yard backs Perry Harrington and Jeffrey Moore, the 
Tigers drove 63 yards in eight plays with Moore going the 
!ast six. The point after cut the FAMU lead to eight with 
9:36 left in the third quarter, and the Tigers continued to 
threaten the rest of the game only to fall short of the end 
zone each time. 

Later in the third quarter Jackson roiled from mid-tield, 
where it received a short FAMU punt, dow n to the Rattler 
four before the FAMU defense held, forcing the Tigers to 
settle for a 23-yard Randall Lewis field goal that cut the 




Rudy Hubbard 



. . . \m// take h^^am to Texas Saturday for 
Championship game 

lead to five at 15-10 with the fourth quarter yet to be 

played. 

Jackson State mounted what looked to be the winning 
drive at the FAMU 42 after Albert Chester botched a pitch 
out while under pressure. The Tigers drove to the FAMU 
two yard- line where they had first and goal. But a delay of 
game penalty follow ed by two fumbles by Tiger freshman 
quarterback Keith Taylor left Jackson State facing fourth 
down at the six, and Randall Lewis' field goal attempt 
went wide right. 



TAUYHO 

1 Bedrm. Furn. 
$166 

Month to Month Leases Available 
Convenient to FSU 
Pool, Laundry Rm. 
765 Basm St. 
224^0606 




CUBA DIVE TRIP 

March 17 — 14 

Scuba Classes 
Begin Jan • 
Rt«isttr Now! i 



NtrlllFla.Dive Center 

n6?LV Bradford Rd ^li ilM 




Seminole defense throttles 
Gators in 68-61 victory 



Murray Brown and Ed Chatman each 
scored 20 points, but playmaking guard 
Tony Jackson got most of the credit. 

The unbeaten FSU Seminole basketball 
team pushed Its winning streak to three 
games with a 68-61 victory over the Florida 
Gators in the Jacksonville Coliseum 
Saturday niglit. 

The 6-0 Jackson, who hit an even 50 
percent from the field, finished the game 
with 13 points and eight assists, and was 
generally the man running the show for the 
Seminoles all night. 

The Seminoles also received strong 
bench support in the person of freshman 
Pemell Tookes. who scored 12 points, with 
most of them coming when the game was 
close in the second half. 

The game revived a rivalry that has been 
dead for nine years, with the Gators still 
leading the all-time series 18-6. 

FSU shot well in the second half and 
fihished with 53.4 percent while the Gators 
tell trom 52 percent at halftime to finish at 
48 percent for the night. 




Tony Jackson 

. . . quarterhacked FSU to victory 



Rm. 314 University Union 

644-5744 

9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 

typesetting 
paste-up 



A*BbC\l23 



AaBbCcI23 
AaBbCcl23 

AaBbCcl23 
AaBbCcl23 




GREAT SANDWIOIII WITH 
OUR GREAT SALAD BAR AND 
DRAFT KER 

punas SIART AT I"" 

(INCLUDES SANDWICH, FRIES, 
AND SALAD MWL) ALSO 

SAUD BAR $P 
AU YOU CAN EAT 

OPEN SINL- IHIHt 11 AJI.-M P.M. 
m. ASAT. 11 AJL-UPJI. 



HAPPY HOLIDAYS 



have a safe and 
happy holiday! 



fcroin 




^^^^^^^^^^^^ fl^ift ^^e^^^-^ 

P^. We do have a very good selection of clothing for that special 
neraon on vour list* 

*^ ' WtetiMOOd Shopirine Cwitar 576-21S6 OpaiiTdm 



28 / Monfj; 



f>^- •ffr.M.T 11. 1978 FLORIDA FLAMBEAU 




Classined Ads 




montagt priim. MMf, IKII 0itl»- b«^ooiii li t yy gj w u HU y call 




ST PRICES IN TOWM 
rvgt. cwitm, couches. 



rocordft & lots of othor uMfwl 
hOUMtioM itvmt Tlw OM PotMMMtf 
OofMralStort 1763S Monroe 7?4 1434 
M F. I2 S 30, S«t 11 5 Sun 2 5.30. 



Phillipt Eloctronic TomtaM* 
Mod4>i 212 le«s cartridgt 
liO^ (tl79J» MOW) Coll 222 3*10 or 



iyiLX)TON POMO 
r Club section/ 
SIS^OOO 

(CNfCOUfH if you intond n> build solar } 
^-4i00ov«ninot 

M SPEED MKC. MOT O^KABLE 

riPST OPFER REMOTELY RE 
SEMBMNG REASONABLE RE 

COMf'f N'J TAKF I T 5/'; IWI 



inquift of: M4.1139 
Jofini* A^pDroo RmS 



Fonosonic turntable, receiver, 
om-fm radio, • track hook up All in 
OM unit. Spoakors Mparata. Ail in 
9Md cond.lso. Call Peggy, 22441S7. 



YAMAHA 340 MX 



al«o 

. Scycia trailer with straps 
Stag full wet%uit, excall Gond 
used lets ttian 5 times 
Buetchor Coronet axcailant cond 

call mm S7M414 



MUST SELL CLARINET AND 

LADIES 10 SPEED BIKE! 

PL EASE CALL MARY 644 4324 

Schwin 10 fpaad man's bika good 
condition, first S40. tafcas it! Call 
SFa-tft7. Kaap trying anytime 



LIKE NEW JVC JRS300 
RECEIVER TWO YEARS OLD 
tlMt7S.««M ROBERT 




1974 Blue Maverick 4 door V 8 $500 

Nef'ds vome work AC radio come see 
for yourself Aptsa U19 W. Ponsacoia 

Latving town soon must sell 1972 
Vega 6T LifttMCk. Nice little car in 
decent running cond First reasonable 
Offer accepted. 575^77 betw. 5-7PM 



CLASSIC 19SI 
A fine motor car $2500 



«72 dr Coup devilte Cadillac 
excellent cond orig mile MOM CaH 
after S oop m 575 S051 

197t Comoro Z 2t black tan interior 
4 tpeed 390 4 barrel P S. P.B tilt 

stearinq AMFM stereo cassette new 
tires VSfl/S 00 Firm Call Monica 

sy6-3---v 

71 TR4 GOOD CONDITION, 
ONE OWNER, U)W MILEAGE 

878 6737 



IS 

m 



69 VW AUTOMATIC, RECENT 
TIRES AND BATTERY, AM FM 
STEREg tm CALL 222-6949 

1972 PINTO RUNABOUT 
Will carry youanywfiere 
Good cond., AC, luggage rack 
SilS. l9W3tti, after s call 444^44 

LOOKING FOR A USED CART 

See ttte folks at 
USED CAR SUPERMARKCT 
2525 W. Tennessee 




HvjNDA 500F 1972 Yoshmura cam, 
Kerker headers, KiNs. Locktwrt Oil 
Cooler & Thermostat, Lester Mags. 
Continental tires, luggage rack. 
BeflertHan now. sys-Wjll 



SUBLET 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED 
APT IN PLAZA START WfHTiBI 
QUARTER CALL ZtlrllSl 

SUBLET ROOM CASH HALL 
SINGLE OR DOUBLE, MAID, FOOD 
WINTER CALL 723^230 DEP. INCL. 



2 BEDROOM ATT 
CAMPUS. Rent tMi 

utilitias call Jania 



Large turn, studio apt. S135. momti 
NKludas cable and garbage cot lection . 
Dunwoody Apartments, 405 Dun 
woody St. Res. monagor 222 4505, or 
MS-9ff2. lorry, no pail. 

Take over contract at Osceola Mall all 
meals maid service pool %aMn» TV lm 
more into call Wondy 2243315 



Two bdr houia fWar FSU, unfurnisnm 
k • tc tten oQulpMair, fancad yard pofi 
ok 1225. mo. Manttcalio- 
evenings. 



Hall will have a hmitad 
number of spaces available winter 
quarter. For info call 222-9010 or como 
by 500 CliafMl Dr. "Tha Placa Far Yau 

at FSU" 



ROOMS FOR RENT ALPHA XI 
DELTA SORORITY S225 PER 
QUARTER CALL OEOC 5*9-977t or 
9f9-f922 



SUBLET HALE WIAMEA 2 BDRM 
IN FRONT OF POOL, CLQSE TO 
PUBLIX CALL f7a-1fM 

FROM $80 MO. INCL. UTILITIES 
Boautiful & charming furnished 
rooms, central heat & air. Ideal for 
students, only 1 bik. from FSU. All 
completely renovated & now ready for 
occupancy Furnished apts inci util. 
also available See at HEARTH 
STONE 415 W. Coilega Ava. THE OAK 
409 W College Avo. - 

Kespcnsible female roommate 
needed to share 2br unfurnished apt 
w-sama ai Mission Ridge Apts. $50. 
deposit, $125. per month which 
includes utilities. Come by Apt 146 or 
call 878 5026 Also roommate needed 
for 2 br trailer in quiet neighborhood 
near Tallahassee sports V^9n9 $50 
deposit $90 per nru)nth wMdi includtft 
utilities: Call $71 5026 

COMPLETELY FURNISHED 
HOUSE 2 BR, 2 STUDIES (or 3BR, 1 
STUDY) FCNCeO YARD, NEAR 
AlMMbM»«50mo., 



Sublet apt for winter qtr only. $70 
mon. Call for more info. 222 0520 



1 & 2 BR house and apts 702 708 W St 
Augustine St two bks south FSU ask 
tenants or call Gage 3864014 $l25to$150 



SUBLET OSCEOLA HALL POOL 
SAUNA AAA! D MEALS WILL PAY 139 
CALL JOSE 334 7914 

Sublease I br apt at Plaza, $160 a 
month Furnifurf for sale, real 

bargin. Cail Maggie 222 1306 

Luxury 1 bdrm. unfum. located at 114 
Chapel Dr. Ground floor apt. Rent 

inci Cable TV & garbage pickup $147 

per mo Res. Mgr. 575 2711 



AAALE OCCUPANTS ONLY $240 PER 
QUARTER NO UTIL. 
RHONE flMlOO AVAIL. JAN 1 

Rms available in sorority house fOr 
Winter spring quarters. 

for Info, call Batsy 224-9793 



looking to upgrade your living condi- 
tiont? Here's your chance Quaint 1 
bodroom apt on College Ave. $125 
mofifh Call Gardon.223-97t7 affor 4 

Country Living; Furn 2 BR iMHise on 
(firm Lq rooms Garden planted quiet 
people only. Avail Jan — June 79. 
$100 mo. Call 878 2994 Soon! 

Sublet 1 Bdrm Furn apt. Cable, pool, 
laundry. Across from law sctHX>i $175 
mo. Dec 15 or Jan 1st Call 223 9344 



Nice one bedroom apartment for rent. 
Near campus, 135 per month, Call 
2227 S 23 or come by 529 W. College. 

very close to FSU, turn 1 txJr apt in 
duplex A C tile bath, water furn. 
prefer grad Student or couple. No 
children or pets $110 mo 386 7998 

Sublease spacious 2bdr' furnished 
townhouse, 2baths, central tteat&air, 
naor FSU, TCC, Westwood Shopping 
Center Available Jan l 586 7262 

NEED A PLACE TO STAY OVER 
CHRISTMAS? CALL NANCY 234-1«4Z 
DAYS OR $70 7012 



' BDRM FURN UttFURN DUPLEX 
EZ watk to FSU bog. 12 15 l l $140 

V >- • es 222 1023 



. B_ET 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED 
APT. IN PENSACOLA ARMS 
JAN Jung CALL $75-5033 $225 

Sublet stwdia apt. at Ptoza 190 nri 
utilities 2 pools 3 tennis crts. launor^ 
rentpd. for Dec. move in free 224-MM 
ask for Jofwi keep trying 

A vanat>4e beginning Wtr Qtr 1 tx)rm. 
''-p. mpt. Quiet netgr.txxnood, 

pftvata Iran A tocfc yd., 1125 por ma. 
$100 dap. no laasa, wanted verynaaf A 
dean person la rent to 741 El Dorado 
St 322^401 (3 Macks from FSU) 

SUBLET 1 BDRM APT. $160 MON 
FOUR SEASONS CABLE TV POOL 
SAUNA LAUNDRY ROOM WALK TO 
FSU CALL 324^)475 AFTER 5. 



WAIN, DC Round-frlp leave after 
Thurt. 14th A.M. A rehirn by Jan 3 
U-a334 or moss.^ 2390 for Thorn V, 
•Kp. 

F m rmmt to Share 2 brm apt, my furn 
It's nice. Near FSU non-smoMr Ut 
mo 13 Utll Kristin 576 9089 



CALL 234-0<03 

ROOMATE NEEDED RIGHT NOW 
MAN $60 A AAONTH PLUS 13 
EXPENSES IVj Ml FROM CAMPUS 
CALL JOHN OR HIS BROTHER AT 
576 3016 LIKE SOON 



Liberal Fem Rmmt to share 3 bdrm 
hse ntar FfU 175 ma.-fona-ftiird uttf 
nice yard 575-5039 ■ 

HOUSEMATE WANTED, BEAUTI 
FUL HOUSE 1 MILE St OF 
CAMPUS LARGE YARDS, T?EES, 
WINDOWS. 100 MONTH. 57a-47«t 
EVENING 

Need 1 roomate (Pref, female) neat 
and dependable. 4 bedrooms washer 
dryer — call 574^19 John or Chad 



Roomate w,inf(-(j large 3bedr oom apt. 
Will have o/jr. iji-droam. Call be t ween 
10 * 11 p.m. 222 7074 



Swingshift mother ^ants female grad 
Student to rent room Rent reduced in 
exchange for babysitting. Call 
306 8743 after 6 p.m. 



Femalf- to -.^lare 2brm apt I' j miles 
Non-smkr preferred. 
223-4517 90 per mo electric. 

Female roomate to share nice 3 
bedroom house. Washer dryer. Etc. 
Call Debby 877 2534 

ROOMMATE WANTED SHARE 
NICE HOUSE $10 Va UTIL NO 
TOBACCO MARGOT 224-9109 

F roommate wanted own room but 
need own bed rent 80 per mo i 3 util 
Short drive to FSU 386 7920 Keep 
trying ^ 



TALENT NIGHT AT J^ ZACKAR Y'S 
$50 $20 $10 PRIZES 
Anyone interested must audition Wed. 
2^ PM. 2394 W. Teno. St. 



F RMMT NEEDED STARTING 
WINTER $80 mo. + Vjutil. '/4mi. from 
sfh but I also have car. Leave 
message for Patty at 644-4960 (240 
Bellamy) 

F RMMT 2BR DUPLEX OWN ROOM 
$75 A MONTH 13 UTILITIES $50 
DEPOSIT 1BLK FROM CAMPUS 
2244920 



ROOMMATE WANTED own room 
$60 mo -1^ 1 3 utilities nonsMoker pref 
18)0 Pepper 575^24 

Responsible, clean, non smoking 
male to share 1 bdr. apt at PLAZA 
Apts If interested -call 222-9905 

AFTER 6 p.m. 

M or F roommate wanted for 3 bdrm 
house prefer grad stud $0O-nfM>nth plus 
1-3 uts Terry in Geog or 222-4497 

Female roomate for 3 br house $70 
mn. plus util fenced in backyard near 
Sears Call 878 3409 anytime 

Female roommate wanted start Jan 
1, 1 mile from FSU $80-t-l 3 utilities 
Furnished 3Br House 576-4803 

LIBERAL A^LE RMT. OWN ROOM 
$80 + '/^ UTIL. CALL KA "HRYN 
575-5709. 



SOMEONE TO TAKE MY FINALS 





praduction 

work booinning Jon. 3. Hour* wHI 
vary according to Size of 

but will §¥m90t tibm/l W-TS per 
You meat be available to work from 

9p.m. to t» m . Sunday ftiru 
Thursday. AFTER DEC. 17 call 
224 6097 far 

interview 




NOUMEA I NT I NO 
WAUXOVSRINO 
PRCffURC WASNf flO 

experienced & reavxiabfe 
Call Jeff 224 7745 for estimate 

LOONEY TUNES PERSONALIZED 
SINGING MESSENGER SERVICE 
I DAY AOV RES RSQ 



XMAS SHOPPING GOT YOU 
LET LOONEY TUNES ERASE 
YOUR FROWN! 

APPLIANCE REPAIR 

Service on all major appliances, air 
conditioning and heating. Sales- 
recondittoned units with 9f tffy 

2127^^^ 5*" <ayf 
599-7879 (pocket beeper) 

^^•r^n9 m^im. LICENSED 



BASS LESSONS 

Ja/z and Contemporary Styles 
TECHNIQUE AND THEORY 
Jim Cretier 224-0534 

TYPING 

TERM PAPERS, MANUSCRIPTS, 
DISSERTATIONS PH. 575 3495 



Typing — ail sorts — . 

correcting typewriter — transcripts 
of tapes. Reliable. Call 57a-S915 9 to 5. 

WANT YOUR GIRL TO BE YOURS 

NEXT YEAR, SEND HER A 
LOONEY TUNF PiJ! I OF CHEER 
222 8680 

TYPING, FAST EXECUTIVE 
MACHINE THESIS, PAPERS, ECT. 
75c page 306 4843 

Fast txwlt typist IBM correcting 
salec. papers, dissert., mss. Linda 
Ourbiw 57a- 1900 

Typing quick, quality, TOc dbl spc pg 
Edit & rewrite at nogo.table rates 
Kym Gross 234-6375 days 

I DO CHAIR WEAVING AND 
CANING Good references, reason 
able rates. Call Rhonda around 6 
evenings. 224-0312. 

Typing for students & tHisinesses 

Term Papers i Diss. 10 yrs. ei^Mri- 
ence phone 877 5259 after 6p.m. 

Typing for students & businesses, 
term papers & diss. 10 yrs. experience 
phone 877-5259 after 6 p.m. 

Keep in tune 
CRAIG BLOCH PIANO TUNING 
RESTORATION, MOVINGS, 
ESTIMATES 
222 5686 

SUNNY DAY NURSERY SCHOOL 
Near FSU. Certified Teachers. 
Hours 7:3B5:30. Call 077-0334 

I STRING TENNIS RACQUETS 
One day service. Lowest prices in 
town. Cail Bill at 576-0286 




RECEIVED YOUR LETTER 
PLEASE CALL US 6 7690 

MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE! 
We may look burned out at times but 

we're still hot enough to start afire. 

Love, Elmodme & Amanda 

RICK WOULD USE LIGHTER 
FLUtO. 




MERRVCNIIISTMAS 
BILL ANOtiUTCH" 
l OvE Tne2 PHIS 





OONGRATUU^TIOflS 
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WE ARE VERY PROUD OF YOll 
LOVE 

TO V < AMINA, JIM DUTTMAN. 

HAPPY BIRTHOAY TOOTtt I LOVE 
VOU. YOUR CHIT iULfg 

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA 
Merry X mas to you all Good ludt to 
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John Thanks tor making my laot 

Quarter a very Special one I'm going 
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TODAY'S TRADING POST TREAT: 
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purchase af a hot mritey and cheese 

irfiJ7. 



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Fenriale companion wanted for flying 

trip to Eluthera. Must be mature, 

intelligent ^ down to earth type. 

Preferably over 21 If interested writo 

me for more into R. Allan 8UA Capitol 
Circle Souftf 32304 



Bratoflfy at FSU ] 

Contr butions to fht 
to Capital City 




Campled Hairstyiing wash, cono 
tion, cut & btow ilry Ar n 

balance perms Henna 
r color short ha^r or 
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MED. PIZZA $1.75 AT THE PUB 1312 
W. TENN. ST. 11am-6pm MONDAYS 

i pay cash for things of Value, 
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Sat & s«m Xmaa fiftof 

anytime. 

WE TAKE THE rm!^ 
RIOHT Headquarters 

perms and great haircuts Headquar 
ters 2017 W. Pensacota St. 576-1511. 



IMMACULATE TYPING i 90 
bnttM I'm livin' in a tent with nottitn' 
to oof; I got tioles in my shoes and 
can't afford booze. But I don't want 
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toe Flantoaau office. 

J ' ' ■ I "" 

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TAPPS Offers free test aw« 

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for 2 to Key West or 
I anytirrve after Dec 13 Will 
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E ^ ei- ngs 575-3223 

EVERYBODY'S DOING IT 
Looking good and saving mon^f at 
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575 6420 



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typist requires f inanciM 
assistance via typing in my twme All 
types of typing, including theset. and 
scentific papers Price rteget. Ptton* 
3859853 anytime, 3851392 days 

JO'S FOR HAIR 

the difficult we do immediatly, the 
impossible ♦af^ e longer We'r» 

ttve orves to see it /ot* ve got probiefr 
hair C all us tod ay. 121-1112 



Don't cut your gift list becMse of 
inflation :give a gift that is less 
expensive and still uncommon and 
sophisticated: get a 1979 calendar 
with your computer portrait for SL7S 
at Computer Portrait, l 
N oi-tliw o o d Mall next to 




Found 
St call 576-5337 



onOcala 



Backgammon Tournament Cash 

Prizes every Mon at 7 :30pm 

POOR PAUL'S POURHOUSE next to 



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Come see us for that specoi ha rcut 
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drinks ft beer available. Open 
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For Abortions, pregnane y screening, 
birth control or health mfo call 
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CHRISTMAS 
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Wo 
in 



of a ^0 S 

s\* in ' ' 
Tennt . 

The Srmi 
firsts out 
ringing 

FSU AH- 

winner (' 
listed the 1 1 

Dunlop 1 1' 
HeEttoer C 
victory. 

•*The wv 
as I had pr 
three. ' N 
especially 
brea^stro^ 



yawl). • 

Maul als( 
reftisal to 
indicative < 
saw a furt< 
temperatu 
meet 
Instead, f 
weather tb 

"With ...I 
he pleasc(^l 
favorably 

Last we< 

Intr 



wi 



With fall 
tntramur 
wrapped u| 
with chani] 

In flag t| 
were captf 
division). 
Lambda ( 

Cross c< 
Omega grj 
James v 
champion' 
women's. 

The burl 
four chan 
was takeH 
iadependi 
and the t j 
Epsiion. 
maintaincc 



Intht 
Osceol.l 
Indepc! 
The hii 
was 




ORIOA FLAMBEAU Mofictov. Dms&aim 11, 1998 / 27 



lleavar it 



lid, mat f«T 

,1 Co Hum«n« Society 

i Dec 14 4 7pm. tlOO 
• ^»ch will be good for 

} Cork" now, can aiso 
Junng cocktail party. 
«. feline fre.nds, corm 
r ieaver on 0«c. W.. 

St. 3M.51t2 



>LIANCCS 

or haul off yogr 
^1 Marshall davi 



ISED 



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it.compatability.pcr. 
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WINTER QUARTER 
THAT PLAYS ANY 
[UNES NOW IS YOUR 
IGET ON TELEVISION 
f UM CALL2225503 ASK 
^SST PRODUCER - 



pMA PHI'S 
YOU CLEAN YOUR 
HE BRIDGE? 



[he 9 students charged 
lice brutality at FSU 3 
Contributions to the 
^ «eiif lo Capital CHy 



jirstyling-Wash, cona. 
t)iow dry Acid 
jnns Henna's 
[lor short hair or 
|g hair. All work by 
k supervision of quaii 
prs Tall. College of 
fng. 1221 Appaiachee 
r7.a 



Ie typing I'm so 
In' in # tent with nothin' 
iNHes In nny shoes and 
looze. But I don't want 
py, just your typing 
}page. Contact Owmi at 
office. 

ion's Restaurant Rum 
Budweiser draft 50c 
>at. 



|TOr 2 to Key West or 
p afitr Dec 13. Will 
driving. Call Joyce 

3223 



DOING IT. 
and saving money at 
AIR 223-1112 HBO N. 



ypisf requires financial 
typing in my home All 
I. including theses, and 
(rs. Price negot. Phone 
e, 3i5i3nclays 

IR 

e do immediatly, the 
es a little longer. We'rf 
? if you've got probiem 
oday. 222-1112 

le 



d black kitten on Ocala 




IHY CHRISTMAS 

(RY CHRISTMAS 
IRY CHRISTMAS 
!RY CHRISTMAS 
tRY CHRISTMAS 
IRY CHRISTMAS 
IRY CHRISTMAS 
IRY CHRISTMAS 
RY CHRISTMAS 
RY CHRISTMAS 
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CHIMiTMAS 




swimmers 



imion 




•••••••••••a 



Gulf 



writer 



DOWNTOWN GULF 

STUDENT SPIOAL 
M% tff M iff taflt A litef 

kiduiiiiig: 



apitahzing on its depth, and shrugging off the effects 
of a 30 degree temperatute drop, the FSU women's 
swimming team swam to a surprise 75-56 win over 
Tennessee Saturday in the Union I\iol. 

The Seminoles. now 5-1 in dual meets, captured eight 
firsts out of 15 events, bat sealed thor victory by also 
ringing up 10 thkd place finishes. 

FSU All-American Terri MOler was the only double 
winner (400-IM and 200 butterfly), but Coach Terry Maul 
listed the triumphs of Sally Davis (100 yard butterfly). Kim 
Dunlop (100 yard freestyle), and the second place finish c^i 
Heather Clare (200 yard breaststroke) as the keys to the 
victory. 

**The meet would have come down to the last event, 
as I had predicted if not for the surprising efforts of those 
three," Maul said. "Heather's second place was 
especially gratifying because she beat their top 
breaststroker, Susie Wright, who had earlier beaten Lisa 
Ncncioni in the 100 breaststroke (Nencioni won the 200 
yard)." 

Maul also had praise for the Tennessee team, citing its 
refusal to fold, especially in light of the weather, as 
indicative of its strength. On a cloudy Tallahassee day that 
saw a furious rainstorm precede a cold front that dropped 
temperatures from 79 to 43 degrees in a four-hour span, 
the meet outcome could have easily been affected! 
Instead, FSU, which has not faced much mdement 
weather this fall, held its poise. 

"With only four days rest for this meet. I can't help but 
be pleased with the victofy." Maul noted. '^This ranks 
favorably witii kst week's achievement." 

Last week the Lady Seminole tankers took the measure 




Lisa 



^ . . . he/ped women to 75-56^ o\m 

of Kansas and Wisconsin, two swimming powarhouses, in 
the Lady Husker Invitational in Lincoln, Neb. 

OtherFSUwinnen Saturday included Kathy Miller (200 
freestyle) and both felay teams. Kim Averill. Jeannie 
Dowdle, Kathy Miller and Nencioni won the 400 yard 
medley relay, while Dowdle and Miller joined with Terri 
Miller and Kim Dunlop to capture the 400 yard freestyle 
relay. " , 



Intxamurals 



champs 



by geraid ensley 



With fall quarter drawing to a close, the 
intramural department at FSU has 
wrapped up another busy athletic season 
with championships awarded in six sports. 

In flag football, regular season crowns 
were captured by Smith Sixers (dorm 
division). DM Sports (independent), and 
Lambda Chi Alpha (fraternity). 

Cross country running saw Alpha Tau 
Omega grab the team title, while Bobby 
James won the men's individual 
championship and Laura Ledbetter won the 
women's. 

The burgeoning sport of volleyball saw 
four champions crowned. The dorm title 
was taken by Magnolia Dungeon, the 
independent title by Uncle Duke's Dopers, 
and the fraternity title by Sigma Alpha 
Epsilon. Uncle Duke's Dopers also 
mnintnirK^d it*? form to sweep tn the 



all-campus crown. 

Intramural tennis had but a single team 
champion with Kappa Alpha capturing that 
honor. The indivklual tMes were won by 
Jon Dwight (singles) and Jim Wood and 
Andy Zeldtn (doubles) in the fraternity 
division, and by Bill Radler (men*s) and 
Fran McLean (women's) in the 
4ndependent. 

Phi Delta Theta won the team title in 
golf, while Marcus Beck captured 
individual honors: Phi Delta also added the 
team horseshoes crown to its all-sports 
portfolio, as Marshall Colberg won the 
singles title and combined with Robert 
Short for the doubles title. 

Former Leon High kicker Ryais Lee 
edged out Lee Whitson for the field goal 
kicking contest honors as both split the 
uprights from 60 yards, but with Lee able 
te do it with more consistency. 



Sports In B 



In the final game of the football season, 
Osceola tS deteated Lost Cause for the 
Independent Intramurals Championship. 
The high scoring, high powered offense 
was led by Charlie Anderson, with John 



Fvans and Peter Mortgadson as the 
primary receivers. The defense, which 
shut out most of its opponents through 
the use of intimidation and interceptions 
was led by Will Fleck and Chuck 
Wavchanus. Osceola 8's tlnai record was 
7-.1. some of their other victims during 
the playoffs were the Bayou Bangers, the 
BiiinT-ads and I'p in Smoke. 



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! Tallahassee! | 

Xdse your tnnitny I 

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Platter > 

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from staff reports 

Beset by bad shooting, the FSU women's basketball 
team bar< K eked out a split of a pair of weekend road 
gaifies. After sqiiecitng by New Orleans 64-62 Friday, tbe 
lady Seminolet fell to Tttkuit 7M1 Saturday night. 

Against New Orleans. FSII ooavettcd less than a third of 
its ^loU from the field (29 of 89). as Cherry Rivers* 22 
pomts led sD Semidie soocers. New Organs* Jan 
Gemhsuter pumped m 23 pohits for the game high. 

The next night game against Tulane. the SemUwIes shot 
a poor 24 pcreem tnm the field, with only Cherry Rh«rs 
<B points) and Jsdde Arnold (19 pooits) hi double figures. 

FSU coach Diane Mtuphy ei^pvene^ disappointment, 
but not surprise at #ie brief road trip. 

*'l guess it was to be expected.'* Murphy said. *'We had 
played five tough games, mentally speaking, in a row. 1 
think the Florida game took a lot out of us (won by FSU 
88-79), so we were due for a letdown.** 



Inconsistency was a^ain the FSl bugabtx). Leading by 
II points at the half, the Seminoies went dead cold in the 
second half and wound up losing bv that same II point 
margin (78-67). Against New Orleans. FSU had battled 
back into the lead after trailing by two at thv half Cherry 
Rivers' two free throws with only four seconds left rescued 
the Seminoles from a loss in a gym whose excesatvc li«at« 
according to Murphy, sapped both teams. 

**We did mt shoot weU either lUgM.'* Murphy said. *tt 
wasn't that we took bad iho^. as oMidi as H was tlwt we 
dkhi't put them in.** 

Murpl^ plans to gwe her charges next three days off 
because of final exams and the need to rest her 
over-worked team. After practices on Thursday and 
Friday, the Seminoles win head to hieflqihts where they 
hope to improve their ^3 record afainst three Metro 
Conference teams (Cmcinnatl. LouisaUle. and Memphis 
State) in the Liberty Bowl Classic. 



FSU eliminated from V-ball nationals 
after losing to UCLA in delayed match 



from gtaff reports 

Overwhelmed, perhaps, with the magnitude of the 
competition, the FSU women's volleyball team lost all of 
its preliminary matches in the AIAW national tournament 
and was eliminated from competition at Tuscaloosa, Ala. 

The Seminoles put up a game fight, despite consecutive 
losses to Southwest Missouri, Arizona. Texas A&M, 
Peppcrdine, and UCLA. FSU took all but Texas A&M to 
the three game limit, scaring even top-seeded UCLA 
before being eliminated. 

The UCLA match was marked by an unusual tornado 
delay. After falling 15-2 in the opening game, the 



Seminoles were leading 13-11 in the second when officials 
halted play and moved players and coadies to safer shelter 
due to tomad€»cs in the Tuscaloosa area. After a 2*/i hour 
delay, play was resumed md FSU hung on for a 15-12 
ifk!mf /^9hriBeiMttg game was won by UCLA. 15-7. The 
entire three game match took four hours and 15 minutes. 

Despite the shutout at the nationals, it was a brilliant 
year for FSU volleyball. A young team that graduates only 
Vclma Wright and Janice Hunt, the Seminoles compiled a 
28-9 match record and won state and regional 
championships. . 



I 

3 swimmers 
qualify for 
nationals 
I 



Sparked by two FSU record 
performances by Kevin Connell. the FSU 
men's swim team qualified three 
swimmers for nationals at an unscored 
meet in Columbia. S.C. 

In addition to Connell. in the 100 and 
200 yard breaststroke, the Seminoles 



qualified .bteve Albntton (50 freestyle) 
and Keith McConnell (100 backstroke). 

After a ten day Christmas break, FSU 
will resume practice u ith ihree-a-days in 
preparation for a January schedule that 
features Oklahoma. Florida and Miami. 




Night Bus Service 

to both Molls 
Go Early, Shop Late 




576-5134 



for complete schedule 




SEE US FOR 
THE FULL 
LINE OF 

^SHOES. 




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• 1429 W. Tennessee Street 

• 2529 Apalachee Parkway 

• 2316 N. Monroe 



IWe Start Fresh Every Day. 




TALLAHASSEE MAU. 

MERRY CHRISTMAS 

AND 

HAPPY Nm YEAR 

TOAU 
tSM., turn. & T.CX. 



Mm 



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